Performance Sophie Whettnall // Ghost Trees

On 5 and 6 July, on the lawn in front of the castle

© Sophie Whettnall
© Sophie Whettnall

Ghost Trees

With Ghost Trees, Sophie Whettnall flirts with the boundaries between the visible and the invisible, between the present and the past and between dream and reality. Using biodegradable pigments, she paints shadows of fictional trees on the lawn in front of Gaasbeek Castle. Time seems to stand still and the displaced shadows invite you to slow down and reflect.

Ghost Trees forms part of the exhibition ‘Rebel Echoes – 800 years of stories, 100 years of museum’. Playing with the light and surrounded by the trees of the park, her intervention completely merges into the landscape, literally even: sunlight, falling rain and the growing grass gradually blur the paintings, causing them to resemble echoes from an imaginary past.

Inside the castle, visitors can experience the video Midnight Sun by Sophie Whettnall, in which she literally brings the landscape indoors. Dedoubling and mirroring themselves, the images intertwine with the patterns in the murals in Carletto's room. Along with the soundtrack, the images also reference the bats that found a home in the attics and cellars of the castle.

Sophie Whettnall

© Lydie Nesvadba
© Lydie Nesvadba

Sophie Whettnall (b. 1973 in Brussels) is a Belgian multidisciplinary artist who explores the relationship between the body and the environment through performance, installations and film. Heavily influenced by landscape painting, she is guided by her senses and her fascination with the elusive, almost disorienting effect of light. Whettnall's works are quiet exercises in contemplation that simultaneously engage the viewer. She challenges the idea that seeing equals understanding.

Since the late '90s, her work has been exhibited internationally, including solo exhibitions at Le Pavillon de Vendôme in Aix-en-Provence (2022), Galerie Michel Rein in Brussels (2022), Bozar in Brussels (2021), Fondazione Palazzo Magnani in Reggio Emilia (2021), Galerie Michel Rein in Paris (2021) and at DE CENTRALE for contemporary art in Brussels (2019). She has also participated in numerous group exhibitions in Belgium and abroad, notably at STUK in Leuven (2024), ​ Gallerie degli Uffizi in Florence (2024), Villa Empain (Boghossian Foundation) in Brussels (2023) and the 52nd Venice Biennale (2007).


Practical info

» The performance will take place on 5 and 6 July, weather permitting. If the dates change, you'll read it here. ​
» The work will remain visible for a while but will slowly fade and disappear again under the influence of the natural elements.
» Location: on the lawn in front of Gaasbeek Castle
» You can attend the performance for free. Sophie Whettnall is available for questions during her breaks. ​
✓ Please do not walk on the lawn during Sophie Whettnall's performance.
✓ Please keep your dog on a leash.
✓ The best view of the performance will be from the French Garden (part of the Museum Garden).

With thanks to the Agency for Nature and Forests

Tess Thibaut

Press and communications, Gaasbeek Castle

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About Gaasbeek Castle

Gaasbeek Castle sits enthroned amidst the rolling hills of Pajottenland just outside Brussels. The medieval castle has had an eventful history, evolving from a strategic stronghold to a spacious country house. The Count of Egmond, was one of its best-known owners. The present building was given its romantic restyling at the end of the nineteenth century by the enigmatic French Marchioness Arconati Visconti. She was the daughter-in-law of aristocrats Giuseppe and Costanza Arconati Visconti, who, between 1821 and 1839, turned the castle into a unique meeting place for intellectual exchanges between exiled Italian politicians, European writers and scientists. Marie Arconati Visconti was also interested in the great intellectual debates of her time, as her correspondence with and support for Alfred Dreyfus testify. She set up the castle as a museum for her considerable art collection and treated it like a historical theatre set. The dream castle created then is still something of a time machine with its historic interiors, tapestries, paintings, furniture, sculptures and other valuable objects.

The castle park, with its centuries-old trees, ponds, lanes, winding paths and occasional historic buildings, is the ideal place for winding down. The estate also includes a unique museum garden where old varieties of fruit and vegetables are cultivated. 

Contact

Kasteelstraat 40 1750 Gaasbeek (Lennik)

+3225310130

kasteelvangaasbeek@vlaanderen.be

www.kasteelvangaasbeek.be