David Claerbout's latest creation The Woodcarver and the Forest will premiere at Gaasbeek Castle. A work of art – not just to look at, but to live with.
The Woodcarver and the Forest presents itself as an intimate portrait of a reclusive young man and the attentive depiction of his only, seemingly banal occupation – woodcarving. Crafts, such as woodworking, have become the symbol for a generation looking for a way to relieve screen fatigue and forge a connection with the outside world and, above all, with nature. Simply watching a woodcarver transform a log into a spoon has an almost meditative effect. The repetitive, slow movements and gentle sounds of cutting and scraping form part of the phenomenon of ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response), in which auditory or visual stimuli can generate a deep calm.
In addition to this new film, an ensemble of works by David Claerbout will be integrated into the historic rooms of the castle. The works themselves offer a new look at the collection and architecture of Gaasbeek Castle as a palimpsest or hub of time. But also at the crafts deeply intertwined with it, because coincidence or not: Gaasbeek Castle is surrounded by a vast forest and contains ‘acres’ of woodwork in a nineteenth-century neo-Renaissance style.