Objectif Exhibitions


Objectif Exhibitions is a not-for-profit contemporary art center in Antwerp, Belgium.

Mission

Objectif Exhibitions receives structural support from the Flemish Community, with which it supports international contemporary artists by producing exhibitions, events, and publications of and related to their work, and by providing production budgets and stipends directly to those artists. The art center reaches its local and international publics in person, through printed matter, and on the Internet. The current programme consists of simultaneous and overlapping solo exhibitions, which are presented at differing physical and temporal scales, and with correspondingly different mediation, as well as events, off-site projects, and publications. The director is given autonomy over the programme by the board of directors, and a new director is hired every four years.

History

Objectif Exhibitions was founded in 1999 by Philippe Pirotte, Win Van den Abbeele, and Patrick Van Rossem. Pirotte served as its first director from 1999 to 2004. When Pirotte became director of Kunsthalle Bern, Van den Abbeele became the second director of Objectif Exhibitions. In 2007, Mai Abu ElDahab became the new director, and shifted the programmatic focus to one-person exhibitions, as well as publications and events. Chris Fitzpatrick is the current director, and was hired in 2012.
Objectif Exhibitions is currently located at Kleine Markt 7-9, and was moved to its current space in 2007 by ElDahab. Willem Elsschot once lived in the residence above, and the ground floor and basement facilities inspired Elsschot's classic novel "Kaas." Objectif Exhibitions was formerly located at Coquilhatstraat 14.

Collaborations and Partnerships

AIR Antwerpen, Antwerp; Art Brussels, Brussels; Casco, Utrecht; Fundaion CELARG, Carracas; Circuit; Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius; HALMOS, New York; Kadist Art Foundation, Paris; Kunsthalle Bern, Switzerland; Kunsthalle Sankt Gallen, Switzerland; Matrix Art Project; Middelheim Museum, Antwerp; M HKA, Antwerp; Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam; Platform; Sandberg Institute, Amsterdam; The Showroom, London; Townhouse, Cairo; Villa Croce, Genoa; and Yale Union, Portland; among others.

Exhibitions

Exhibitions have included a four-year exhibition by Nina Beier, a retrospective of Raphael Montañez Ortiz's "Computer-Laser-Scratch" videos, and the first and only screening of lost Bruce Conner film, which David Kasprzak screened after collecting strips of film from a San Francisco bookstore for one year, interventions by Freek Wambacq in 14 different locations throughout Antwerp, as well as exhibitions by Mariana Castillo-Deball, Corey McCorkle, Michael Portnoy, Pedro Cabrita Reis, and Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven.
2013:
The Baltic Notebooks of Anthony Blunt, Frank Chu, Tyler Coburn, Adam Kleinman, Peter Meanwell, Post Brothers, Aaron Schuster, "Tilting the Collector," Sissel Tolaas
2012:
"An Evening Inside Four Exhibitions," "Beste Buur," "Boustrophedonic Procession," "Camping," Audrey Cottin, France Fiction, Iman Issa, Chosil Kil, Luka, Peter Meanwell, Darius Miksys, Rosalind Nashashibi, Francesco Pedraglio, Post Brothers, Will Rogan, The Serving Library, Jennifer Teets
2011:
"Circular Facts Public Meeting: Discussions," "Circular Facts Public Meeting: Performances and Interventions," Norma Jeane & Tim Etchells, Michael Portnoy, Benjamin Seror, The Serving Library,
2010:
"Clifford Irving Show," "The End: Tea Party," Antonio Ortega, The Serving Library
2009:
"Catbag, an afternoon of Cadavre Exquis,"
2008:
Michael Stevenson
2006:
Knut Asdam, Joelle Tuerlinckx
2005:
Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven

Publications

2013:
Objectif Exhibitions, "2012"
2012:
Mai Abu ElDahab, "Behave Like an Audience," Mai Abu ElDahab, "After Berkeley: Objectif Exhibitions 2010–2012," Raimundas Malasauskas, "Paper Exhibition"
2011:
Mai Abu ElDahab, Binna Choi, Emily Pethick, "Circular Facts," Mai Abu ElDahab, "From Berkeley to Berkeley: Objectif Exhibitions 2008–2010," Chris Evans, Will Holder, Lisette Smits, "Goofy Audit," Hassan Khan, "The Agreement," Michael Portnoy, "Script opposition in Late-Model Carrot Jokes"
2007:
Philippe Pirotte, Win Van den Abbeele, "objectif_exhibitions 2001–2007"; Philippe Pirotte, Win Van den Abbeele, Patrick Van Rossem, "objectif_exhibitions 2004–2007"
2005:
Patrick Van Rossem, "Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven: The HeadNurse-files"; Gerrit Vermeiren, "Niels Donckers"
2004:
Karin Hanssen, "Modern Living"; Philippe Pirotte, "Corey McCorkle: Jugendstil"
2003:
Philippe Pirotte, "objectif "
2002:
Philippe Pirotte, Win Van den Abbeele, Patrick Van Rossem, Gerrit Vermeiren, "objectif 1999–2001"