Installation, 202 x 240 x 62 cm.
Collection: Courtesy of the artist and Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp.
"A carrel is a kind of separated cupboard that also serves as a database – it’s a moving study table. In the Middle Ages, carrels were found in monastic libraries, where monks used them to isolate themselves from the environment's noise.
The first carrel I made for a crematorium, the next three were for an exhibition at Zeno X Gallery. They were shown together with large PVC collages, based on quotations from the mystic Marguerite Porete and on Karol Szymanowski’s composing manner. Each of the carrels stands for a step in the development of data processing machines: they are computers, in other words.
Their titles are: Enigma, Colossus, Connection Machine and Coromandel Disturbed 1 and 2. The first was an encoding machine, the second a decoding machine, and the third was launched as a revolutionary idea to put the processing system (the processor) precisely where the information is stored: in the memory. This way, the memory becomes the processor in the computer. I drew a parallel to the stages of a human life."
− AMVK
Add to your list> Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven / AMVK.
> Exhibition: The Welfare State. M HKA, Antwerpen, 29 May 2015 - 27 September 2015.
> Exhibition: AMVK. M HKA, Antwerp, 09 February 2018 - 13 May 2018.
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> Ensemble: AMVK: Works.
>Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven / AMVK, Carrel 5 (Coromandel, Disturbed 2), 2015.Installation, wooden cabinet on wheels: meranti plywood, casein paint and mixed media, 202 x 240 x 60 cm.
>Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven / AMVK, Carrel 1 (Enigma), 2014.Installation, cabinet and mirror, 240 x 201 x 62 cm.