Lot Essay
'Entering the artistic space of Fred Eerdekens places the spectator in a semantic landscape in which what one had thought of as stable meanings are continually twisted and turned. What better way to figurize this than by letting the spectators themselves twist and turn in trying to make sense of the objects. In spiraling around the objects, they in fact become direct figures of the play of logic that rules the objects. After the linguistic turn, and in the wake of post-structuralist thought, the topography of our mental landscapes has become increasingly intricate. The work of Fred Eerdekens attests to this fact and it provides a conceptual map of this, in many places still unknown territory' (H. Berressem, "Differentials and Diffractors:Objects by Fred Eerdekens", Utopia of a Private Language, Provinciaal Museum, Hasselt, 1994).
This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed by the artist.
This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed by the artist.