Monthly Archives: April 2019

FOUR ORANGES SOME OFFICE BUILDINGS, WOMAN’S LEGS

Four Oranges, Some Office Buidings, Woman’s Legs

30 color plates, offset

selfcovering, 32 pages, 21 x 29,7 cm, ed. 500

editing and design with Jurgen Maelfeyt, with a text by Steven Humblet

www.artpapereditions.org

more info

Between August and November 2014 Stephanie Kiwitt was commissioned by Team Flemish Government Architect to make a photographic work about the outskirts of Brussels: Diegem, Haren, Zaventem, Sint-Stevens-Woluwe, Kraainem, Sint-Pieters-Woluwe, Oudergem, Ukkel, Vorst, Drogenbos, Ruisbroek, Sint-Pieters-Leeuw, Anderlecht, Dilbeek, Groot-Bijgaarden, Sint-Agatha-Berchem, Ganshoren, Jette, Strombeek-Bever, Grimbergen and Vilvoorde. These neighbouring but extremely different areas cannot be conceived in terms of a single unequivocal image. The composition and order of the double pages in this publication do not refer to their geographical origins, but introduce a new order and create a connection related purely to aesthetics of form.

CHOCO CHOCO

CHOCO CHOCO

16 plates in colour offset print and 19 black and white plates printed from photopolymer plates/ clichés

paperback, 32 pages, 21,2 x 30,2 cm, ed: 500

Lubok Verlag, Leipzig 2015

ISBN 978-3-945111-11-6

www.lubok.de

Wondelgemse Meersen

Wondelgemse Meersen

406 color plates, offset

softcover, 52 pages, 22,5 x 32 cm, ed: 700

editing and design: with Till Gathmann and Winfried Heininger

ISBN 978-3-03747-044-2

Kodoji Press, Baden 2012, in association with School of Arts Ghent

www.kodoji.com

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The marshes of Wondelgem are situated in the north of Ghent, in close proximity to the old docks. The former swamp area is about 100 hectares in size. It is surrounded by the municipality of Wondelgem to the north, an industrial zone with nineteenth-century factory buildings to the east, the ring road and a canal to the south, and a residential and small commercial zone to the west. A large part of the area consists of wasteland that is traversed by railroad tracks.

As a result of the local urban development scheme, a business park will be built here as well as a bus and tram depot, a forensic psychiatric centre and parking lots.

CAPITAL DECOR

Capital Decor

black and white inkjet print on blueback paper

leporello fold, 1273 x 50 cm

clamshell box, 37 x 52 cm, ed: 10 + 2 A.P.

Kodoji Press, Baden 2011

ISBN 978-3-03747-039-8

www.kodoji.com

Capital Decor

12” vinyl disc

reading 20:56, voice: Christophe Piette

edition of 300

Kodoji Press 2011

ISBN 978-3-03747-041-1

www.kodoji.com

Cornerville

53 black and white plates, offset

hardcover, 32 x 24 cm, 112 pages, ed. 500

editing and design with Nicola Reiter

Editions GwinZegal, Plouha 2008

ISBN 978-2-9528099-4-8

www.gwinzegal.com

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During a one-year stay in Marseille (2006/7), I observed the changes in urban everyday life that came about as a consequence of the massive redevelopment and construction measures that were taken in the context of the ‘Marseille Euroméditerranée 2010’ project. Taking Marseille as an example, Cornerville shows an urban area whose ‘common’ architecture is being changed permanently, both by economic interest groups and individual inhabitants; it is deformed, destroyed or reproduced from scratch.