From 28 September 2024, Antwerp will celebrate Belgian artist James Ensor with four diverse, world-class exhibitions. They extensively show his versatile work and how he is still a source of inspiration for contemporary artists. The Ensor Year is big deal in Antwerp, but also in Ostend, in Brussels, and in the whole of Belgium.
The Royal Museum of Fine Arts of Antwerp (KMSKA) highlights – in one of the largest overview exhibitions ever in Belgium – how James Ensor radically breaks the rules of art and becomes a game changer.
Museum Plantin-Moretus turns into a laboratory for graphic experiments and photography museum FOMU shows photos by world-famous American photographer Cindy Sherman for the first time in our country. In her work, just like Ensor, she asks critical questions about identity, gender and stereotyping. In the fashion museum MoMu, make-up artists walk the path to personal expression, artistic experimentation and freedom.
Contents
- 1 75 years
- 2 1: ‘Ensor’s wildest dreams. Beyond Impressionism’, KMSKA 28.09.2024 – 19.01.2025
- 3 2: ‘Ensor’s states of imagination’, Museum Plantin-Moretus 28.09.2024 – 05.01.2025
- 4 3: FOMU 28.09.2024 – 02.02.2025
- 5 4: ‘Masquerade, Make-Up & Ensor’, MoMu 28.09.2024 – 02.02.2025
- 6 Who was James Ensor?
- 7 Art and museums in Antwerp
75 years
James Ensor was born on 13 April 13 1860 and in 2024 it will be 75 years since he died. From 28 September, Antwerp will commemorate this versatile artist.
Four diverse exhibitions in Antwerp highlight his groundbreaking oeuvre in the international context of Ensor’s time and show how Ensor’s visual language is still a source of inspiration for contemporary photography, fashion and make-up.
Together with a select group of European avant-garde artists, James Ensor remains an innovator, a game changer and an inspiration. That is the story that Antwerp tells with the four exhibitions, where masks are only the beginning of a profound and meaningful journey.
Nabilla Ait Daoud (N-VA), alderman for Culture in Antwerp: “With the four diverse exhibitions in the KMSKA, the Museum Plantin-Moretus, the FOMU and the MoMu, Antwerp pays tribute to the versatile oeuvre of avant-garde artist James Ensor. His unique style, with his use of symbols, masks and grotesque figures, has had a lasting influence on the art world. These exhibitions demonstrate his artistic mastery and relevance today”, she says in a press release.
1: ‘Ensor’s wildest dreams. Beyond Impressionism’, KMSKA 28.09.2024 – 19.01.2025
The KMSKA – home to the largest Ensor collection in the world – shows how James Ensor broke the rules of art and then radically rewrote them. French Impressionism did not suit him. Everything that was creepy or grotesque, whimsical and funny, even more so. That’s where his and our ‘wildest dreams’ begin.
Ensor’s ‘Oyster Eater‘ next to Édouard Manet, Claude Monet with ‘Adam and Eve‘, Ensor who competes with Edvard Munch or Emil Nolde. Visitors are treated to absolute masterpieces from renowned museums such as the MoMa and Metropolitan in New York, the Chicago Art Institute, Musée d’Orsay in Paris and the National Gallery London.
The museum has the largest and most diverse Ensor collection in the world. Moreover, the Ensor Research Project is also housed here, the knowledge center around the modern master. The KMSKA is therefore the perfect place for the total picture that Ensor’s wildest dreams offer.
2: ‘Ensor’s states of imagination’, Museum Plantin-Moretus 28.09.2024 – 05.01.2025
Museum Plantin-Moretus presents a remarkable graphic adventure with ‘Ensor’s States of Imagination‘. The young James Ensor experimented extensively with etching techniques for several years. He is not a born printmaker, but quickly develops a unique approach to the medium. With predecessors such as Rembrandt in mind, Ensor takes his own path. His studio becomes a testing laboratory for experiments in which chance sometimes plays a role.
‘Ensor’s States of Imagination’ brings together for the first time the most remarkable results of these experiments: preparatory drawings, copper plates and various states of prints. In this way, unexpected details emerge, depth is created in large crowds and new shapes take shape.
How did Ensor make prints? What techniques did he use? How did he experiment with this medium and which old masters inspired him? You will find out in this exhibition.
3: FOMU 28.09.2024 – 02.02.2025
FOMU presents an exhibition by the American photographer Cindy Sherman, one of the most important living artists. Sherman is world famous for her satirical and socially critical portraits, for which she uses herself as a model. This is her first retrospective in Belgium, with both known and unknown works from leading collections worldwide.
Like Ensor, Cindy Sherman is known for her critical and ironic commentary on social conventions through masquerades. In her work Cindy Sherman asks critical questions about gender, stereotypes and age. Sherman’s broad spectrum of characters shows the artificial and fluid nature of identity, which seems more than ever to be a matter of choice, (self-)constructed and fluid.
FOMU joins ENSOR 2024 by translating the issues from James Ensor’s oeuvre into a contemporary artistic context.
4: ‘Masquerade, Make-Up & Ensor’, MoMu 28.09.2024 – 02.02.2025
In fashion museum MoMu, Ensor’s ideas about masquerade, (false) coquetry, seduction, deception, the artificial and the ephemeral are extended to today.
MoMu celebrates the painters of fashion: the craftsmanship and inexhaustible creativity of makeup and hair artists in a multimedia exhibition in which light, color, art, fashion and makeup meet.
Today, make-up and beauty have grown into a trillion-dollar industry that confronts people with their physical transience, imagined imperfections and existential fears. But makeup is also, like paint, a form of personal expression, artistic experimentation, joy and freedom. The exhibition explores how closely makeup is intertwined with many aspects of our humanity.
Who was James Ensor?
James Sidney Edouard, Baron Ensor (13 April 1860 – 19 November 1949) was a Belgian painter and printmaker, an important influence on expressionism and surrealism who lived in Ostend for most of his life. He was associated with the artistic group Les XX.
Ensor’s father, James Frederic Ensor, born in Brussels to English parents, was a cultivated man who studied engineering in England and Germany. Ensor’s mother, Maria Catherina Haegheman, was Belgian.
Ensor himself wasn’t interested in studying and left school at the age of 15 to begin his artistic training with two local painters. From 1877 to 1880, he attended the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, where one of his fellow students was Fernand Khnopff.
Ensor first exhibited his work in 1881. From 1880 until 1917, he had his studio in the attic of his parents’ house. His travels were very few: three brief trips to France and two to the Netherlands in the 1880s, and a four-day trip to London in 1892.
During the late 19th century, much of Ensor’s work was rejected as scandalous, particularly his painting ‘Christ’s Entry Into Brussels in 1889‘ (1888–89).
Ensor’s paintings continued to be exhibited and he gradually won acceptance and acclaim. In 1895 his painting ‘The Lamp Boy‘ (1880) was acquired by the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium in Brussels, and he had his first solo exhibition in Brussels.
By 1920 he was the subject of major exhibitions; in 1929 he was named a baron by King Albert, and was the subject of the Belgian composer Flor Alpaerts‘ ‘James Ensor Suite‘ and in 1933 he was awarded the band of the Légion d’honneur.
Alfred H. Barr, Jr., the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, after considering Ensor’s 1887 painting ‘Tribulations of Saint Anthony‘, now in MoMA’s collection, declared Ensor the boldest painter working at that time.
Even in the first decade of the 20th century, however, Ensor’s production of new works was diminishing, and he increasingly concentrated on music—although he had no musical training, he was a gifted improviser on the harmonium, and spent much time performing for visitors.
Against the advice of friends, he remained in Ostend during World War II despite the risk of bombardment. In his old age, he was an honored figure among Belgians, and his daily walk made him a familiar sight in Ostend.
He died there on 19 November 1949 at the age of 89.
Art and museums in Antwerp
- FOMU 2024 | Antwerp photography museum ft. Dirk Braeckman, ‘RE/SISTERS’ and Nick Geboers.
- A visit of the Flemish Tram and Bus Museum – Vlaams Tram- en Autobusmuseum (VlaTAM) in Antwerp.
- MUSEUM AAN DE STROOM | ‘City at war, Antwerp 1940-1945’.
- ANTWERP | M HKA modern art museum presents first half of 2024 activities.
- ANTWERP | Discovering queer(ed) art with the Queer Tour at the KMSKA fine arts museum.
- REVIEW | Illusion Antwerpen, an active and photogenic museum.
- Antwerp museums and sports facilities team up with European Disability Card for accessible leisure activities.
- ‘Jef Verheyen, Window On Infinity’ exhibition at KMSKA, the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, until 18 August 2024.
- Inside the KMSKA or Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp.
- Museum Mayer van den Bergh.
- 2024 at Royal Museum of Fine Arts of Antwerp (KMSKA): Rubens, James Ensor, Jules Schmalzigaug and many more.
- 2024 at the museums of Antwerp ft. Ensor Year.
- ANTWERP | Inside Rubens House.
- ModeMuseum MoMu – Fashion Museum Antwerp 2022.
- Museum Plantin-Moretus in Antwerp.
- ANTWERP | Museum Vleeshuis up for restoration.
- BOOK | ‘Antwerp. An Archaeological View on the Origin of the City’ by Tim Bellens.
- Red Star Line Museum.
- Paleis op de Meir.
- DIVA, Antwerp Home of Diamonds.
- ANTWERP | Red Star Line Museum of (e)migration.
- ANTWERP | Museum Mayer van den Bergh is expanding into former District Hall.