LAb[au]
Formation1997 (1997)
Location
Coordinates50°51′15″N 4°21′07″E / 50.85419°N 4.35186°E / 50.85419; 4.35186
Membership
digital art, electronic art
Websitewww.lab-au.com

LAb[au] is an artist group founded 1997 in Brussels, Belgium with the aim to examine the influence of advanced technologies in the forms, methods and content of art.[1] Members are: Manuel Abendroth, Jérôme Decock, and Els Vermang. Former members were: co-founder Naziha Mestaoui (until 2000), Grégoire Verhaegen (until 2003), Pieter Heremans (until 2006) and Alexandre Plennevaux (until 2009).

From the name 'LAb[au]' one can read in ‘LAB’ (standing for an experimental approach) and ‘BAU’ (ger. = construction / providing a link to Bauhaus[2]) both a reference to the group's approach to work.[3]

Laboratory for Architecture and Urbanism

With a background in architecture its members and projects are concerned with the construct of ‘space’ and the way it can be planned, experienced and conceptualised in an information age.[4] The attention lies in the relation between architecture, light and advanced technologies.[5]

The projects of LAb[au] deal with processes and systems based on different rules.[6] This method is determined by the technological and artistic parameters and qualified by the artists as metadesign.[7]

MediaRuimte

MediaRuimte
gallery for electronic arts

This alliance between theory and practice motivated the group to found the gallery 'MediaRuimte' in the city centre of Brussels in 2003. The gallery work stands for LAb[au]'s typical function as a collaborative art agency as for a trans-disciplinary work,[8] being expressed through a program ranging not only over exhibitions, screenings and audiovisual performances, but also to conferences, artist-residencies and workshops.[9] Featured artists range from Manfred Mohr to Nicolas Schöffer, Casey Reas, Limiteazero and Frank Bretschneider to Mika Vainio.[10]

Exhibitions

Artworks/Projects

  • 2001-... sPace Navigable Music
  • 2003-05 Man in e.Space (with Marc Wathieu, res publica, Marianne Descamps & Claudia Miazzo)
  • 2003-07 liquid space (with many artists ranging from Marius Watz to Frank Bretschneider, Holger Lippmann & Lev Manovich)
  • 2005 liquid space book
  • 2005 point, line, surface computed in seconds[12]
  • 2006 PixFlow#1
  • 2006 12m4s
  • 2006 EOD #02 (with Frederik de Wilde)[13]
  • 2006 Touch (on Dexia Tower)
  • 2007 Who's afraid of Red, Green & Blue? - chrono.tower (on Dexia Tower)
  • 2007 spectr[a]um (on Dexia Tower with Limiteazero, H. Lippmann, O. Bender & F. Bretschneider from raster-noton and the Balanescu Quartet)
  • 2007 PixFlow#2
  • 2008 Who's afraid of Red, Green & Blue? - weather.tower (on Dexia Tower)
  • 2008 Binary Waves[14]
  • 2009 SwarmDots
  • 2009 Chrono Prints
  • 2009 Framework f5x5x5

References

  1. 2002, Spark-Online Magazine Version 31.0 connective inter.face—archite[x]tures Archived 2012-09-18 at archive.today
  2. Susanne Maßmann in: Exhibition Catalogue of 'Young Belgian Painter Awards', Brussels 2009
  3. F. Massad & A. Guerrero Yeste in: Experimenta Magazine #45, page 74, July 2003, Madrid
  4. 'Bright , architectural illumination and light installations' by Frame Publishers & Die Gestalten Verlag, 2008
  5. Tasarim Archived 2010-02-01 at the Wayback Machine - Visual Arts Magazine #168, February 2007
  6. Yves Bernard & Domenico Quaranta: 'Holyfire - art of the digital age', Brussels, 2008
  7. Maurizio Vitta - 'Agora, Dreams and Visions', published in: l'ARCA nr. 176, December 2002, Milan, Italy
  8. Club Transmediale: 'CTM 07 catalogue', Berlin 2007
  9. Liesbeth Huybrechts - 'Crossover - Kunst, media en technologie in Vlaanderen', BAM & Belgian Lannoo Campus, 2008
  10. BrusselsNieuws on Mika Vainio Exhibition at Mediaruimte
  11. "Sankt Peter Köln | Jesuitenkirche Sankt Peter Köln".
  12. "Point, Line, Surface computed in seconds – Lab[au] | Interactive Architecture Lab".
  13. "Networked_Performance — EOD 02 _ electric organ discharge 02 [Paris]".
  14. "Comatics Festival • Appreciating Art + Design".
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