Henk van Rensbergen
No Man’s Land

2021/01/16 - 2021/02/27
DUMONTEIL Shanghai
Galerie DUMONTEIL is pleased to present Belgian photographer Henk van Rensbergen‘s solo project, featuring a representative selection of the artist’s two renowned series, “Abandoned Places” and “No Man’s Land”.

“Abandoned Places”, a series that grew out of the “Urban Exploration” movement that Van Rensbergen and his friends started in the 1990s, focuses on the silent beauty and macabre decay of these places. Following the principle of “take nothing but photos and leave nothing but footprints”, they explored the unoccupied buildings of our time. As a Boeing 787 pilot, Van Rensbergen has ventured into most countries in Europe, as well as the United States, Mexico, Brazil, Japan, and several countries in Africa.

These deserted territories are full of unknowns, every exploration is an adventure, and each photograph unfolds a fascinating story. In “Adams Theater” (2009) in New Jersey, the fire ladder beneath Van Rensbergen’s feet rattles; in Żeliszów in southwestern Poland, the “Rays of Sun” (2011) beam into the theater-like church, convincing one that an empty church is never forsaken by God; and “The Burnt Library” (2011) of a town hospital in Italy allegedly held important information about the Mafia. For the artist, his photographs are not meant to document the appearance of these ruins, but rather to “reproduce the atmosphere: the tension, the complexity, the emotion, the surprise, and the feeling.”

With the three publications of the “Abandoned Places” series, Van Rensbergen began his search for a new entry point, which led to the project “No Man’s Land”, in which he creates an imaginary anthropomorphic world where animals live in our abandoned buildings after the demise of mankind, showing undeniable human behavior.

To give these animals a tangible presence in varied man-made structures, Van Rensbergen chooses to go to zoos or suburban farms in the early morning or at dusk to photograph the “protagonists” in his works, capturing the required light angles and then selecting the most suitable “dwelling” for each of them, resulting in this seemingly “natural” effect.

Neither of the two series has human figures, yet the human presence is everywhere. This concurs with the concept of the “Anthropocene”, in which the human imprint on the global environment has now become so large and active that it rivals some of the great forces of Nature in its impact on the functioning of the Earth system. Henk van Rensbergen’s works are a closer look at the decay and drastic changes that have taken place behind the rapid urbanization over the past century, offering an alternative perspective on the times we currently live in. 
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