Chaim van Luit translates Jo Eyck’s children’s room into an installation on the ground floor of the Coach House. He presents a selection of works in and around this structure, illustrating the connection between past and present and exploring the topics from Eyck and Van Luit’s conversations. The works thus explore notions of domesticity, nature, looking, the relationship between inside and outside, and the passage of time.
Chaim van Luit places archaeology in the context of art. While strolling through forests and cities, Van Luit collects unusual materials, such as salt, stone or fireworks. The finds provide a starting point for his sculptures, photos and videos. At first glance, the simple, reduced forms stand out. Upon closer inspection, the images often appear to carry vestiges of a specific history, such as the wayfinding created by visitors in Limburg’s marl caves or scars on a person’s skin. Van Luit meticulously documents his quests for secret entrances, hidden cave systems or objects. His fieldwork often constitutes the work of art itself.
Van Luit studied at the Maastricht Academy of Fine Arts and the Van Eyck Academy, Maastricht.
About Conversations
Once every two years, Conversations invites artists,
filmmakers, architects or designers who were born and raised in the
Euregion and who are at different phases of their artistic practice:
young and emerging, mid-career and established. The notion of the
conversation always provides the starting point for a presentation at
the eighteenth-century Coach House.
Images by Moniek Wegdam