credits

Wolfgang Becker

Wolfgang Becker
Sofie Ruysseveldt & Dagmar Dirkx
Wolfgang Becker (WB)

I made a long talk the day before yesterday with two ladies who in Cologne invented a new website which is very good. It’s called Audio Archive Rhineland. They interview all those old people like me to talk about artists and museum people and critics to talk about their past. It’s nice, I heard some of the others and the two ladies made it fine, they had a good machine. This morning I heard myself and I think: Woah, they had a good machine!

(DD)

DD: This one too! The quality is quite good.

(WB)

Well, that was for reproducing not only for documentation.

(SR)

That’s a nice initiative, I think, to do that.

(WB)

We have a video archive- this house has a video archive- which many people like me criticize very heavily. It has to do with my past. You know, like Michael and Barbara studied in Karlsruhe which is far from Aachen, and they had no money to live. Michael finished his studies as a teacher, and he got a teaching job here in Aachen. They came to Aachen because of that teaching job and hired an apartment in a house in Raeren. They found that in Aachen there was a new museum and so we got in contact and that was very nice. So, I followed the first steps they did, I followed the birth of their daughter and the first video they did of the first 365 days. But still at that time when the first video artist appeared, the first people made experiments with video. We never regarded Michael and Barbara as video artists. They were photo artists, and they were very excellent and extraordinary in their domain. We had all these technical machines, which I still like to play with, but then it was a nice job to do that because every day some new machine appeared. So, we opened the Neue Galerie with an idea of the sculptor Christiane Möbus who was living in Hannover. She asked me to lend a xerox machine and we put the xerox machine in the middle of the big hall and the people were invited to hold their face or the hands in the xerox machine and Christiane signed her name on them. That was a great success. It was nice! Now tell me, you got an archive to huh?

(SR)

Maybe I can tell a bit more about the research project and about Argos? I don’t know if you ever visited Argos in the past?

(WB)

No, I never did.

(SR)

So, we were founded in 1989 and that was mainly because in the seventies you had the International Cultural Center in Antwerp with Flor Bex-

(WB)

Are you in Antwerp?

(SR)

No, we are in Brussels. But that was very important for the production and distribution of video for artists. But then in 1985 the ICC became part M HKA, the museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp and the activities that ICC did stopped a little bit. In the end of the seventies, beginning of the eighties you also had the New Workshop in Brussels that was important for production and distribution of video art. But they also stopped their activities in 1985 when they became part of Beursschouwburg in Brussels. Then there were discussions to proceed these activities for video. There were discussions with artists and with Beursschouwburg but then there was a decision: we don’t do it anymore. Then there were two former employees from the Flemish Theater Institute that decided together with some Belgian artists to found Argos and in the first years we mainly focused on the distribution of video, artistfilm- and video. But at the end of the eighties the idea of building a collection started and then we also started the first conservation projects which were very early at that time. Because I don’t think that in 2000 a lot of organizations were already thinking about how to preserve this kind of material. We did a conservation and restauration project for the videoworks of Lili Dijourie and some other artists. Today we have built up a collection of more than 5000 artistfilms- and videos.

(WB)

5000?

(SR)

Yep, 5000.

(WB)

Woah, that’s a lot of bureaucracy!

(SR)

We don’t buy works, but we work a little bit like a museum. We make exhibitions, we do the conservation of the works, we are disclosing the works in our library, we have a library where people can do research, but we make contracts with artists. We have archiving contracts and these contracts say that we take all the costs for preserving the works for free but in exchange we ask the artist if we can make the work available in our media library for education and that we can show the work within Argos, so not outside Argos. If for instance another organization, let’s say Ludwig forum, asks us to lend a work then we cannot do it with these archiving contracts. We also have a distribution contract and there we take care of the whole distribution event. If for instance Ludwig Forum contacts us to show a work then we do everything to bring the work to Ludwig, to provide it in the right format to send it to here. Then we have a 35% of the revenue to cover our costs like for our personel that is doing distribution and to send it and then 65% of the fees goes to the artist. With this contract we can distribute it or we can show it at another venue than Argos. That is a little bit the model on which our collection is built.

(WB)

Is it part of the Flemish Ministry of culture? Are you official or is it private?

(SR)

It’s private, it’s like a VZW, I don’t know how you call it in English. It’s like an organization without profit and we are subventioned mainly by the Flemish government, but we have to submit a dossier every five years. We have to ask the government every five years for structural funding so it’s possible that we don’t get the same money or that we get less or if we want to do more things that we ask more but we don’t get it. So if we get subventions it’s for five years and then we have to resubmit. So, we are mainly subventioned by the Flemish government but we also try to maintain the collection by the incomes we have from distribution, so we invest it in infrastructure, things like that.

(WB)

What do you take for a video by Lili Dujourie? If somebody wants it?

(SR)

If somebody wants it, then we have fees that are different for single screening or for exhibiton and then we make a price that is based on the duration of the work and also if it’s a single screening then it’s cheaper but if it’s like an exhibition that lasts three months or six months there’s also a difference in price. We always negotiate but for us the most important thing is that a big part of these revenues are going back to the artist.

(WB)

What will be the medium which you send?

(SR)

That depends on what the organization asks. So if it’s an older work that was made on an analog support then we have it in a digital format but now it’s less and less. In the past there were a lot of institutions that asked the DVD and then we burned it on a DVD but now it’s always never asked anymore. It becomes more and more like an obsolete screening format. Sometimes its Blue-ray but that’s also something that is not asked a lot anymore.

(WB)

You send it by WeTransfer or so?

(SR)

Yes, if the file is not too large but otherwise we send a hard disk or a USB-stick and then it depends on the venue what we deliver. Of course, it is shown on a small monitor, it’s different if you show it on a big cinema screen so then we see there are institutions that ask for a ProRes or.... So, depending on what equipment they have, we deliver what they need.

(WB)

And is it expensive? If I ask you for a video by Lili Dujourie of 30 minutes for one performance, what would that cost?

(SR)

Goh, I’m not so aware of-

(WB)

I mean, approximately. Would it cost 100 euro or?

(SR)

I think something like that, maybe 150? There is also a difference between when it’s shown in an educational context or not. For educational purposes, if it’s like for instance a professor who wants to show it during a symposium or something, then we offer 50% reduction. So, it’s not the same for an institution that asks entrance fees, then we make deal. It also depends on if they ask a lot of films because then it becomes very expensive when you count all the costs for each film but then we say: okay, if you this package we can offer it for this amount that is cheaper than if you would count every film individually.

(WB)

And you are authorized to do so?

(SR)

It’s the artist that gives us the permission. Our distribution is also non-exclusive so that means the artist keeps owner of his work so if he wants to give it to an organization or wants to distribute it himself or herself, he or she can do it.

(WB)

He takes it off your collection?

(SR)

No, they also have a copy because we also do preservation, they can come to us and ask a copy whenever they want but they also can have other distributors because you also have LAX in the UK, you have LIMA in the Netherlands. So, if they want to have 10 other distributors besides Argos, it’s no problem, they can do it. If they want to give it for free in a museum, we cannot say you can’t do this or that, we are just distributing the work and if we have incomes of the distribution event then we take a part cover our cost and we give the rest of the revenues to the artist.

(WB)

A lot of administration, I think. Administrate all the bank accounts of the artists-

(SR)

Yes, we have balances that we send out every year to the artists where they get an overview of all the events and what we ask, what we got. Every year they get an inventory of all the incomes.

(WB)

And you have technicians to keep the sources safely?

(SR)

Yes, we have-

(WB)

How many people are you?

(SR)

We are ten with the director, everyone together. So, we have a-

(WB)

You are not the director?

(SR)

No, I’m the collection manager so I’m responsible for everything that is related to the collection also the conservation and the preservation. But we also have an IT-manager, video-technician who is doing the whole IT-infrastructure because now we have an archive of more than 200 terabytes. So, for a foundation without profit it’s really a big infrastructure. All these servers, all these tape robots, it’s something that is not lasting forever so you have to refresh your hardware and hard disks. It’s also a really costly activity but we get a lot of feedback from artists that it’s really a relief that they don’t have to take care of these preservations themselves because the technology is changing so rapidly and its costs so much to have this infrastructure and do it properly that they are really glad that there is an organization like us where they can just if they finish a film put it there and they know: I don’t have to care about the hard disk, if my hard disk crashes I can just go back to Argos with a new one and they copy all the files on this hard disk. For them it’s a real relief that they only have to focus on the creation of new works, and they don’t have to always be busy with the old works and how to keep it readable for the future. We also do everything as much as possible with the artist, so with respect for their intention. If we do digitalizations or restorations, we always go back with the captures. Sometimes if we have different captures of tapes, we try to choose the best version and say okay form this moment this is the digital version that is approved by the artist. If it’s being shown, we also try to document how they want it to be shown with respect for how they created it. So, if it’s an installation that we document then it can be shown on a monitor, but it cannot be projected on a wall or a cinema screen. Now with recent installations we cannot show it projected on a white wall, it has to be a black wall, and when you have the projection, it has to be one meter above the ground and stuff like that. So, also when distribute we have installation requirements that we provide to the people that show it and we say these are the instructions of the artists, if you show the work then you have to respect these things. That’s the way we work.

(WB)

Are all the artists Belgians?

(SR)

No, for Belgium we have a quiet representative collection because we inherited a lot of works from the ICC archive which very important for the beginning of video art in Belgium. We also inherited the archive of the New Workshop. From the end of nineties until 2005 Argos also organized The Argos Festival where we asked Belgian artists to submit new productions for the festival and we also have a history of 30 years and we also always have had a very active collection policy to acquire our works. For Belgium it's a really representative collection but about 60% is Belgian and about 40% is European and International artists from Canada, the US, Korea.

(WB)

And is it only video?

(SR)

Yes.

(WB)

Or is it also 60 mm film?

(SR)

It’s film and video but the main focus is on video. But it’s video and film made by artists. And this research project we started in July 2018, we do it with some academic partners: the University of Brussels, the University of Liège are involved; Marc-Emmanuel Mélon is one of the research partners. We also have MHKA, the Museum of Contemporary Art who has the ICC archives that is partner in the project, and we have some freelance researchers. The project is really focused on Belgian artists in film and video from the seventies. We chose this period because there is not a lot of research done in Belgium about the first years of video art and there are not a lot of publications. All the information is spread in archives. Some things are not clear, so we really thought we needed to speak with the people that were active that time, so we have to do interviews but of course that were active in the seventies are now having a certain age, so we really have do it now otherwise it’s maybe too late. We also have the problem of the supports like Sony Open Reel videos, it becomes more and more difficult to digitalize them and these were the formats that were used in the seventies, so that’s why we thought we start with the seventies. It’s also an interesting period because that’s the beginning of the medium, so it’s also interesting to see what they did with the new medium. It was still very expensive to have the equipment so how do they got the tools to produce this work? So that’s why we chose this time. Now, we are in the first phase of the project: the research phase. We started making an inventory of all the films and videos that were made in the seventies in Belgium. We already had a lot in our collection, we already had a lot in the ICC archive but we also search in literature, in archives to add films and videos that we were not aware of to have a complete overview and then we started with interviews with artists with art historical and material-technical research, so we interviewed them about their work but also about the scene where they were shown, what were interesting places where they could show their work, how they got the equipment to make the work. We also document them if we retrace different versions of works then we try to get a view on why were there different versions? Are these the correct versions? Is it not the correct version? So we also do this material-technical research. Besides artists we also interviewed key figures that were important like Flor Bex, who was the director of ICC. We also did an interview with Guy Jungblut from the gallery Yellow Now and also with Robert Stéphane of Vidéographies. Also, to hear their story about why they started working with the medium, so we did now more than 30 interviews already and I think we got a lot of valuable information from these oral testimonies. Now this phase is until June, we have a year for every phase. Then we hopefully get the funds to do the second phase that will be the digitalization and restoration of works that are not in our collection yet or not digitalized or restored. Then in the third phase, that will also last a year, the purpose is to disclose these research results and the works-

(WB)

And to make it public?

(SR)

Yes, to make it public. So, we will make a publication, organize a symposium, do an exhibition with it but we really-

(WB)

And send it around?

(SR)

And yes, send it around maybe. But that’s also why we try to take these works into the collection because then it’s not project related. The purpose is to include them in our regular collection work and like this they keep preserved, we can add info: if we get for instance three years after the project new information, we can add it, we can document it, we can make everything available for other people. Also, this documentation about how showing works we want to share it with professionals so that they don’t have to redo the work every time because I think we do a lot of double work sometimes. So, that’s a little bit the purpose of the project and we don’t want to stop with the seventies of course; if the seventies are done then we would like to do the eighties and then continue.

(WB)

It’s a lifework for you. I mean, you are young, you have 50 years to do it.

(SR)

So, that’s a little bit the purpose of the project. Your name also came up often, also in the interview with Flor Bex. He said you had a very good relation and that you exchanged tapes. I also think you knew Guy Jungblut-

(WB)

Yes, yes of course.

(SR)

We were also very interested to hear more about the exchange between Aachen and Belgium and I think you also saw a lot of things happening in Belgium during the seventies. So, for us it was also very valuable to have this interview to know more about what was happening in Liège and in Antwerp. We also saw that you organized some exhibitions with work of Belgian artists like Belgien: Junge Künstler. That’s why we would really like to talk to you because you could also give us valuable information about that.

(WB)

Well, hopefully!

(DD)

DD: We always start with a general question: what was the first introduction to the medium of video and/ or film was? So how did you first encounter film?

(WB)

I will tell you this geographical anecdote first. I was trained in Cologne, and I came from Cologne to Aachen, invited by this chocolate manager Peter Ludwig, the big collector and I had the task to found a new museum in an old house. He would protect me because I was exhibiting his collection, so the city council and everyone agreed because he was the head of this big industry in Aachen. I tried to engage this technical side of the university and this domain of technical renewals, but he was not interested. He was interested in collecting paintings and traditional work. We made a kind of collaboration, and he said this your domain, and this is my domain. He had lots of money and I had no money at all because the city of Aachen gave me a very small budget, always saying: you have this big collector behind you why should we give you money. I liked the idea to go to Aachen because of the geographical situation. I had studied in Paris, I made a big doctor thesis about Paris and German painting in the 18th and 19th century, and I felt very much inclined towards the West: to France, to Belgium... And from the first days on I tried to find connections to what is going on in Liège. And people always told me: You are a young man; you go to Maastricht in Holland, and you will find a nice girl. The girls in Holland are more liberal than in Germany and then in the evening you go the Liège because Liège has this wonderful nightlife. So, the first people I met were Guy Jungblut from Yellow Now, Jacques Charlier and Alain D’Hooghe and that was a very picturesque group of people. The most timid is the one whom I respect now as the most important video artist of this group: Jacques-Louis Nyst. He was always timid behind, and he preferred to sit alone with his little cup of coffee and try his little video camera. It was not a question of good instrumentation because nobody had money, and nobody knew which instruments would be usable for what we would like to do. We had heard from Nam June Paik and his video synthesizer. I met Nam June Paik in Cologne at the electronic studio of Stockhausen with Wolf Vostell. Vostell had the first video camera in New York.

The second thought was: now that you have a video camera how do you document it? That was open reel and then slowly Sony developed the U-matic and then the latest were the cassette players. So, slowly but surely in this old house we installed a little room to house the equipment. If anybody would like to show a video tape we would have a monitor which was a TV-set and the necessary U-matic or open reel and we never thought that we would systemize this work and create a collection.

It was a jungle, it was a new medium and we liked it and nobody knew if you could make masterworks with that. It was like mirror. You have mirror and you can polish it or you can leave it touched or dirty and then you have your image in this dirty mirror which is different from a mirror that is polished. Then met Flor in Antwerp and we often met and met privately and became friends. He was himself engaged in being a video artist. We laughed about that, and he gave me a little chance to meet several people whom I will never forget like Isi Fizman who was a very special person and who was very often here and in Dusseldorf visiting his friends around the Dusseldorf academy like Jörg Immendorff and he made some events, some evenings, some performances and Panamarenko was engaged. It is difficult today to understand what it was because it was an era of complete renovation, renewals and starting from zero with a new medium which was totally unkown for everybody. Everybody knew the first steps of TV and those prepared to TV today were really prehistoric, I mean the first TV was prehistoric. In Germany we had one program and now everybody has around 300 and it was black and white. We made with the Liège group the first exhibitions which were not at all concentrated-on video. It was concentrated on..... It showed every medium, I mean Jacques Lizéne made in this exhibition of young Belgian artists paintings which were brown and were hanging in the entrance hall and people asked why they smell so ugly. Yeah, he made them with shit. And Jacques Charlier showed photographs and documents of this social firm in which he worked. And Alain D’Hooghe in his free time took part at bicycle races and took photos of these bicycle races and another about prostitutes in Liège. Nyst was the only one concentrating really on video and showed it on small monitors so you had to take part at this activity of this whole work and life. He was encouraged by his wife because she worked at the TV at RTBF. So as far as I understood, he succeeded to get the first video emission in official TV by his wife in the Belgian TV. We here in the Rhineland had the same with Gerry Schum who got a contact with Wibke Von Bonin at the WDR in Cologne and she made a series of evenings of videos by Gerry Schum. He in a certain way was a very unhappy man because he had no support financially, so he tried to commercialize his system and he offered the videos and films for horrendous prices. I remember a video that was about 7 minutes with boys and one of them had in one of his hands a sausage, a blood sausage and polishing the screen of the TV-set, you have certainly seen that. He offered that for 10 000 Deutsche Mark at that time, so he never succeeded and that’s why he committed suicide. But I mean the collection of Schum contained at that moment severally very interesting artists with whom he had collaborated in a way that he had explained to them what the medium would do with their work. work. I remember Gerry Schum explaining to Jan Dibbets the perspective he would get with a video camera, for his video at the seaside. So, there were several other exhibitions but the main exhibition which I prepared in the Neue Galerie was Belgien: Junge Künstler, from which you have seen the catalog, accompanied another exhibition with international contemporary art from Belgian private collections. Oh, I want to ask you: At that time I wrote in the newspaper every week one article about contemporary art and Sonja gave me all these articles as a present, now she found them in the archive and now I’m taking them and they are 173 and that was four years, can you imagine the patience of the newspaper? It was a tremendous work; every Sunday I sat and wrote this article and then we brought it from Raeren to Aachen to the newspaper office. So, I wrote an article about the first happening that was ever made, It was a happening by Allan Kaprow in 1958 which was called 18 happenings in 6 parts. I made a description, and the description starts with the panels which separate the three rooms of the gallery in New York. And these panels, going to the ceiling of the gallery, decorated with artificial apples and flowers, I rediscovered them when made this tour to prepare the exhibition of international art in Belgian collections, in the collection of Peeters in Ghent.

(SR)

It was Peeters who also had an exhibiton with two other collectors in Van Abbemuseum: Three Blind Mice?

(WB)

I think so, yeah.

(SR)

It was together with Visser, Peeters and this collector, I know him, hmmm.

(WB)

I found one of these panels in my old catalog and now I reproduced it and put it into facebook with my article and saying then, in the collection Peeters, I would like to know if it still exists and if the collection still exists. What happened to the works, do you know.

(SR)

I don’t know but we can try to trace this info and I can send it to you.

(WB)

Yes, I would like to know because that work is very valuable today and historical even. I wonder, I think he had three of these panels and it is great work and at that time we didn’t know and he didn’t tell me maybe he even didn’t know. It’s an early Allan Kaprow work, it’s painted but then it contains these apples and the decoration and then you wonder: what is it? It’s not a painting.

(SR)

Maybe this was also something that was shown at the exhibition at van Abbemuseum in the Three Blind Mice exhibition? I have the catalog in our library so I can check it. We also have a documentary of Jef Cornelis in our collection. Cornelis was a director that worked with Belgian television from the 1960s until 1997 and he made about 222 films about art events, about artist portraits but with a more artistic approach. He made television in a way that is not possible anymore today. Now we consider it more as art than as documentary form television. He also did reportages of art events in Belgium, in the Netherlands. He also made a documentary about Three Blind Mice where he interviewed the three collectors: Visser, Peeters and another one. Then you see the collector Peeters talking about the works in his collections so maybe he can also check if he’s saying something about that in this documentary? I will try to find out where it is and if it was shown at the Van Abbe exhibition and then I will make a copy for the catalog.

We also found about Alain D’hooghe by talking to Jacques Challier. We didn’t hear of him, but I think he was a very interesting artist. He made this Prototype Culinaire and other things like that. Jacques Challier told us he made also a lot of 60 mm films. We were also very interested in that for our research but apparently he died in the beginning of the nineties and his family threw all the films away. So, now we are trying to find a copy somewhere because it was also shown at Paris Biënnale in 75, it was shown in Lausanne at Video, Galerie Impact in 74. We traced one film in the Belgian film archive, but we were wondering if you knew him and what this person was like and if you saw films of him? And if you know more about what he made

(WB)

Well, no I didn’t see films of him. The thing I remember is that he was not a very prominent person who wanted to show that he was the artist, he preferred to do group work with some good friends. At the occasion of that exhibitions (Belgien Junge Künstler?) he led a group of friends to a corner in front of the old house which is the trottoir, a triangle, where normally you are not allowed to put your car. He put his car there and he made a performance showing that he would now let out the oil and the gas of the car into cubes which he put under the car. Then he filled the car with nutrition which were elementary: soup and vegetables. It was in the spirit like Panamarenko: he wanted to show that this would run afterwards. So he put on the car and evidently it moved a bit. At that time the general mentality was not as tragic as it is now. We laughed but we understood the problem. The problem was the car and the elementation of the car and the problem of elementation of the car and the problematics of gas oil. It was all in it but it was not to shock the people but to amuse them. At that time we still laughed, now we don’t laugh anymore. We laugh about other things. Now we laugh about politicians. At that time we had some really good politicians at the governments and now we have no more. So that’s the difference between two eras. I have many talks about that with my son. In my e-mail I sent you the sources which I own of photographs by Alain D’Hooghe. I think there were two of them. Jacques Challier should have more. Have you talked to Laurent Jacob?

(SR)

No, not yet.

(WB)

But you know who he is? What happened with him?

(SR)

He is still working in Liège because one of our colleagues worked together with him. But we have talked to Jean-Michel Botquin, who did a lot of research about Liège. But we didn’t contact Laurent Jacob yet so maybe we should meet?

(WB)

He is a very discrete person and rather suffering from diabetes, but he does great work. He has a beautiful and he has now studios for young guest artists and he has an exhibition hall. He’s an older man, he is younger than me, but still he as a lot of souvenirs and he knows a lot about the history. It is not to easy to have him talk like me. He is in a certain way a man of the old bourgeoisie. He is discretely a rich man. He is bitter about what is happening around him and he might regard that what is around him is a kind of proletarianization of the world but I like him. He does great adventures. The last adventure he made was a travel tour through Ethiopia to discover those sacred monuments. He had connections to Ethiopia. I think for the artists in Liège he and his institution is still a very important place: Jacques Lizène has done several exhibitions there and there are nice rooms. He receives young artists often and talks with them about their works. I think he really is an important person. In the seventies I didn’t really he know him but I did know Manette Repriels and Galerie Vega. Manette knew Barbara and Michael by me and I brought Vostell to her and she on her side gave me the chance to meet Marthe Wéry. Well it would be a fantour on the things that we did together and to look to the exhibitions which she made, first in the galerie vega in the city and later she worked in her private house outside the city in a wonderful landscape.

(SR)

We tried to find a way to contact her for Galerie vega but we didn’t manage to get contact details to talk with her. Do you know how we-

(WB)

No. As you say it, I wonder who can open the doors to all that they left, Jacques and Manette

(SR)

We found her name regularly in our research, so we were wondering if there was also a lot of video shown?

(WB)

Yes!

(SR)

In a lot of interviews there is said ‘ oh no Galerie Vega there were no videos shown’ but now Michael said he remembered that there were films and videos shown. It was not the core of what the galerie was showing but there were videos exhibited so for us it would be interesting to talk with someone who still has memories of what video or exhibitions were shown in the gallery or if we could consult some archive material?

(WB)

Well Sofie, you see most galleries followed the example of A new York gallery and that was a gallery showing paintings in the main room and there was a back room showing a little video set and it showed video. Ileana Sonnabend was one of the first to do so and then everybody did! But then everybody said this does not have any profit, I mean you can look at it but if you want to buy it, I have no idea what it costs? And very slowly video art got a certain value! It was like with the films of Andy Warhol: at first they had no real value. Very slowly they were prepared for commerce but it took a long while. Even when the people here tried to inventorize what was left in the Neue Galerie they found films and tapes and when they contacted the artist they didn’t even know that they had left them and they didn’t know what it was. It was a real jungle. And that’s the same with Jacques and Manette: they had wonderful white walls in their gallery and they showed photographs or paintingsand in the corner they had a video playing. I only know that Manette had a daughter I think in Brussels. The daughter had a family so you might find her in Brussels? Because I wouldn’t know who in Liege would have followed her traces. We have a similar case here with a psychiatric doctor who died some years ago and who in the seventies and eighties had followed my activities and the artists and had collected videos by the artists. Sonja succeeded now to contact his widow, a wife who is very much younger than him and it seemed that she doesn’t even know what it is. It is very difficult to approach her and to tell her. There are some German artists like Ulrike Rosenbach who was tapes in that collection and she is very much interested to know what happened to her tapes.

(SR)

Did you sometimes visit Cirque d’Hiver in Liège?

(WB)

No, I did not. Somebody, maybe it was Isi Fiszman or Flor Bex, I have at home such a big book that shows a wonderful collection of documents of Cirque d’Hiver.

(SR)

Is it the little magazine they had?

(WB)

No, it’s a real thick thing

(SR)

Was it recently published?

(WB)

No, I got it a long time ago. I will send you a photograph of it. It is in the realm of Panamarenko and many people who have performed in there. There was even a woman artist from Dusseldorf who made a performance there with a man. She was at the wall and the man threw his knifes against her. I remember a photograph.

(DD)

I know about this performance but I can’t remember the name of the artist now.

(WB)

Katharina Sieverding! Yes, it was her.

(SR)

We heard that Cirque d’Hiver was a very interesting place in Liège where a lot of things happened. Michel antaki, who was a little bit the founder of this place, sold his archive tot the province of liege. They are still making an inventory of it right now so it’s not accessible at the moment so we cannot consult it. We know that they organized from 77-78 a lot of things with video focusing sometimes on Canadian video but they also showed Belgian video work. There also were debates with the public and the artist after the screening where they talked about videos. They also register everything that was happening on video in Cirque d’hiver but apparently at a certain moment they gave it to an archive, I don’t remember which one. But now apparently they lost everything so all this documentation about all these events is gone. For us it is a little bit like a black spot in our research because we don’t have access to the archive so it’s very interesting to know what was going on there. Apparently they also had a collaboration between Genevieve van Cauwenberghe, who was involved in an organization with youth I think, then you had videographie and Cirque D’Hiver who were collaborating together and apparently a lot of things that were happening in Cirque D’hiver were a preparation for the videoprogram afterwards, videogrpahie. So you had these showings of videos or sometimes debates and then there Jean-Paul tréfois found then subjects to make a program of videographie. This exchange seems very interesting, but we don’t have acces to the archive of Cirque D’hiver and Jean-Paul Tréfois died a few years ago. But I don’t know which book it is.

(WB)

I will have a look. It’s interesting to make this kind of excavations, archeology from the past.

(DD)

DD: I saw in the catalogue of Junge belgische Künstler that there was a section of Continental video with videos. I was wondering if they were part of the exhibition or –

(WB)

What was it?

(SR) & (DD)

DD: You had continental video, who was producing videos in the ICC of Flor Bex.

SR: It was Chris Goyvaerts and Chris Eckhardt

(WB)

No, I didn’t know the artist. It was a tape which came from Flor Bex and we showed it like that.

(DD)

DD: Exactly, that was my question, thank you. Because I saw Marc Verstockt was in it and Lili Dujouri so I was wondering if it was shown more as a compilation of Belgium Video-

(WB)

Maybe It is still here in the collection, have you looked at it in the list? Do they have continental video?

(DD)

DD: Yes.

(WB)

So that is probably the tape?

(DD)

DD: Yes. If you compare German to Belgian Video art, do you feel like they were more open in Germany or Belgium for the medium? Was it more difficult in Belgium or in Germany for critics or like artists?

(WB)

My question at that time was why am I more oriented towards Liège and towards Belgium and why am I not oriented towards Maastricht and Amsterdam? And even today I think that’s a black hole, nobody was interested in that. I mean the whole Dutch Limburg is in a certain way a very conservative part of contemporary art and they were interested in painting and in sculpture but in technological new medium. Regarding Germany, Gerry Chum was a very important figure and there is a Ulrike Rosenbach en Claus Vom Bruch in Colon and Munich nothing, Berlin profited only by the artist program of a D AA D, this exchange program with the united states which gave me the chance to receive several artists who came to Berlin and to stay for weeks in Berlin then and exhibited. The most important exhibition in that realm was the exhibition of Douglas Davis and he was one of the most important persons in the early theory of video and what it meant. He demonstrated some of the theories in the ballroom of the Neue Galerie and that was quite funny. He explained to people that for instance he has now made a connection to his studio in New York, and they would see him in New York talking to them. He talked to them and from his side he pushed against the screen, and he asked them ‘do you hear me? Can you see me?’And at the end of this performance, he crashed the screen and it broke down and he was behind. He was wonderful, I loved him. He invited my first wife Evelyn Weis and me at that time to the museum of modern art in New York where they had organized a conference about video against film and there the most prominent enemies were John Mekas for Film and Nam June paik for Video. Nam June Paik made this wonderful proverb, which was at the same time a kind of criticism to John Mekas: You are only producing electrical bulbs and mine is a candle which is burning and flaming. That was a very nice image of the two media. John Jonas also talked very well and Richard Serra talked and was a very very prominent assembly which at the end made the decision that the MoMa from now on should buy videos. That’s why they were invited; the needed to give arguments why video now is a medium which is worthwhile being collected. There is a book which takes together all the contributions to this conference, you might be interested to see that.

(SR)

Were you ever involved in the CAYC international encounters on video? It was organized by Jorge Glusberg who was an Argentinian and there were different editions: one was in Paris, one in London, one in Buenos Aires, .... There also was an edition in 1975 or 1976 in the ICC in Antwerp, did you participate?

(WB)

No, I don’t think so. I met him, Jorge Glusberg, in the surroundings of the organization of these meetings but I don’t think I ever participated.

(SR)

Often there were also discussions between people who were working with the medium and art critics.

(WB)

We were already busy and travelling a lot and at the same time I was German commissary of the Biennial of Paris. So, I brought several artists like Ulrike Rosenbach to Paris and made contacts in Paris for Aachen. The whole scene was very lively, and we all had not much money. Today my follow ups have a lot more money than we had, and they have many problems.

(SR)

In a time where there wasn’t internet, yet everybody knew each other in New York or London and there was a lot of exchange, and everybody knew this person is busy with this and that person is busy with that ... In a time where you didn’t have this telecommunication like we have now it’s really incredible that it’s so..... It seems like there was more communication back then in a way, everybody was so updated all the time even without the tools we have today.

(WB)

Just like this conversation between us that is quite a different thing from any conversation we would make on videotape or on the media or by telephone or on e-mail.

(DD)

DD: I was wondering if Paul Maenz from cologne was dealing with video art or not at all?

(WB)

No

(DD)

DD: Because he was also operative in Belgium for a while. He worked together with Wide white space gallery and-

(WB)

Well, evidently, I knew white wide space gallery and I was very good friends with Bernd Lohaus and Bernd Lohaus made in this exhibition a contribution which nobody will forget. At that time he was already a very alcoholic and he chose a small room in the Neue Gallery, and he offered me that he would paint this room: he would have dry color pigments and he would throw them, and he stayed in the room, and he would have blue, red and yellow which he took from the buckets. He threw it through the small room, and he stood in this mist of pigments and finally when he ended it looked beautiful, it was a nice room. He came out of the room and was very tired and said ‘Okay’ - we had arranged before that he would get a room in the best hotel of Aachen which was the Quellenhof. I asked him why and he said, ‘when I was a little child my father once went with me to this hotel and I stayed in this hotel with my father.’ I said, ‘Well that’s a reason can I tell to my administration.’ In the afternoon he left in his dirty cloth and went to the magazine opposite, and he bought a bottle of vodka and went up to the hotel. I had only my feels, but I didn’t say anything and the next morning I got a call from the police: We have a man here in our police station which we took up this night in the Quellenhof hotel and we put him here in a cell where can sober up. What happened is a beautiful story. He came into the hotel with his bottle, and he knew the hotel had a bath and he asked for it. The man said ‘well you can have a bath but first you must go to your room and take a shower because you are really dirty.’ This was the first obstacle he found and then he went to his room, and he saw some people sitting peacefully around a monitor, a tv-set, looking at the news. He went up to them, took the monitor and put it vertical and said: ‘you should look tv like that!’. These people were so shocked and started to ask for the guardian and he got into big trouble and fought against some people who wanted to put him in to peace and then the police had to come. Next morning, I explained to the hotel director the situation and luckily, he laughed. That was Bernd Lohaus. And Anny De Decker, she made very important work, which was regarded from this side of the border, and she is very well known but not specially for video. She was known for inviting Joseph Beuys and evidently, she took it on tape and it was a very good video to see Joseph Beuys in the room of the wide white space gallery.

(SR)

We also interviewed Anny De Decker and she had a video of Bruce Nauman, I think, but for the rest she didn’t do a lot of video in the Wide white space gallery. Bernd Lohaus participated in a film that was made by Jacques Charlier that was made for the Biennial of Paris from 1971. It was a collaboration between different galleries in Belgium: X-One gallery in Antwerp, Poirier dit Caulier was it, White Wide Space and then the other one was MTL- gallery with Fernand Spillemaeckers, the husband of Lili Dujourie. The all selected two artists: there was Jacques Charlier, Walter Swennen, Bernd Lohaus, Panamarenko, Guy Mees. Fernand Spillemaeckers also made a sequence of the film as Leo Josefstein, he did something similar as Flor Bex with Hubert Van Es. This was like the collective film with six sequences made by six artists and produced by three galleries and was shown at the Paris Biennial in 1971. But that is the only film/ video we know from Bernd Lohaus.

(WB)

And you have it?

(SR)

Yes, we have it.

(WB)

It is wonderful to have such documents, isn’t it? Have you talked to the people in Karlsruhe about their collection?

(SR)

No but I know them from projects we did in the past but we didn’t talk with them yet but maybe we should.

(WB)

You should!

(SR)

Yes, they are also very good in conservation and they already did a lot of good work for German video art. I got an e-mail from the Joseph Beuys Foundation and they recently gave all the audiovisual work made by Joseph Beuys to ZKM in Karlsruhe so now they are doing the preservation of the audiovisual work by Joseph Beuys.

(WB)

If you would ask me if there were institutions like yours in Germany, I would only know them! I mean, there is no other collecting and preserving and caring for audiovisual arts in Germany.

(SR)

In Belgium too, you have a lot of museums that have a small collection of video art but what is a little bit a pity I think is that they are only available when they are on display. Its not like here in Ludwig where you can consult the videos in a media library but in a lot of museums you cannot watch these films when they are not on display. That’s why it’s important, I think, that there are some organizations that make these videos available in their media library.

(WB)

But then again, you are talking about videos which are easily to show. But now there are several great artists who work with a medium in a way which demands an enormous effort to make an installation with four walls showing beamed videos in a certain audio-constellation so it’s very complicated and needs a big machinery to show it. You can only afford to do that for a certain time during a big exhibition. This old situation of cassette and monitors, you can do it even at home.

(SR)

80% of the works in our collection are single screen but then we also have 20% video installations but more video installations that have multiple screens but if it concerns installations where you have a video component.... We have a few of these works but we only preserve the video component but of course this video component is not a work because it’s a part of a work but we don’t have the other objects that are part of the installation. You also have techniques now that you can film the complex installation and document it like that but that is a big effort for a collection managing institution to preserve these kinds of works and to re-install them and make it available for public when it’s not on display. It’s very complex and not easy to do. When you speak of software-based art where you also have this interactive component, it’s much more complicated. Because we do a lot of effort now for artist film and- video which is very technical but now you already have several years where there are a lot of artists, from the nineties even, who make works with a software base which is much more complicated, but I don’t think there are a lot of institutions that are focusing on this kind of art. I know LIMA, which was multi-video in the past, did some research on software-based art. They tried to preserve it by emulation but it’s much more complicated than what we do but I think now we also need to start focusing on this kind of art because otherwise a lot of works will be lost. I don’t know how it will continue but I think we will deal with a lot of problems.

(WB)

In the exhibition you here, you will have some software installations. That’s another thing. Pipilotti Rist for instance she started very naively with a tape but now it is installations and very complicated.

(DD)

DD: I wonder if you were also in contact with Ingrid Oppenheim because she also had a video collection, but I think that it was maybe more American artists. Her video archive now is in Kunstmuseum Bonn.

(WB)

She was a very nice, discrete person belonging to a bank dynasty in Cologne, which offered her the financial background. She was very much friends with Ulrike Rosenbach. I met her through Ulrike and that was the Cologne group: Herzogenrath, Oppenheim,..; I wonder what is left from that! You could ask Herzogenrath,he is still in Bremen. I think he is still the director of the kunst Halle in Bremen. But Oppenheim, I wonder if she is still alive?

(DD)

DD: I don’t think so

(WB)

I don’t think so either, she was already an old lady at that time. She was very nice and soft.

(DD)

DD: Yes, we found traces but we still don’t know what is true because in Brussels there was a video gallery that showed the works of her collection together with someone called Guy Debruyn. Nobody knows him anymore but we are looking for him because it’s interesting to know which kind of video’s were shown there. But we don’t find any trace.

(WB)

Well, some people can easily disappear. I told my son: “ I’ve got to much traces, I cannot disappear.

(SR)

Besides Jacques- Louis-Nyst, are there still Belgian video artists who you think that made very interesting work or was it mainly Jacques-Louis Nyst and the CAP group who was doing-?

(WB)

Well, I followed Nyst for a long time and I saw his last exhibition now in La Châtaigneraie in La Flémalle and was quite fascinated. It was a very discrete installation of small images and the talking of the stories, I liked it very much. I have strange memory of a big black and white installations of images following the tradition of a lady who made famous films about the Olympics of 1936 in Berlin. It was this famous woman-filmmaker of Adolf Hitler.

(SR)

Leni Riefenstahl?

(WB)

Leni Riefenstahl indeed. Now in this tradition it was an installation of men in a bodybuilding studio who made movements at the boss, and it was kind of combined as demonstration of force and masculine brutality and it was very impressing; I think it was on the documenta, on one of the documentas where video appeared for the first time, it was in 1973 I think. I always combined that with a Belgian woman artist and it couldn’t have been Lili Dujourie. You made me very eager to follow your research in my private documents and whenever I find something interesting I will send it to you! But I think you should definitely talk to this Laurent Jacob because still I am an admirer of what he has done and what he does there. He is very weak because of illness and I will also visit him this spring time. Good, whenever I find things, I will tell you!

(SR)

We will also keep you updated about the research project!

(WB)

thank you and maybe one day I will have the chance to visit you and see your offices and your depose.

(SR)

We will give you a guided tour then! It would also be great if you could come to Brussels if we’re doing some public events in the third fase that will be 2020-2021 but if you come earlier, you’re always welcome! We will certainly invite you when we do the exhibition and when we have the publication, it would be very nice if you can participate on that too. Maybe you could see Florent Bex back and some other people. I think it could be very nice!

(WB)

Is he in good health?

(DD)

DD: He had a small operation but now he is back, he is okay.

(WB)

Well, he is about my age, he is also in his late seventies!

(SR)

Jacques Charlier is also very alive!

(WB)

Yes, I meet him often! He is also very engaged in making contacts with people. Jacques is constant contact.

(SR)

It was also an interesting interview with him that we did. And we also did one with Jacques Lennep. I also saw Pierre Courtois. Still on the planning is Ransonnet and Guy Jungblut. We now will digitalize, in the framework of our project, the technical fiches of the first video manifestation in 1971 in the gallery Yellow Now. Jungblut asked about 81 artists to make a proposition for this closed circuit in the gallery Yellow Now and then also Barbara and Michael Leisgen and Dan Graham sent proposals but also Jacques-Louis Nyst. The fiches are the only thing left of this manifestation together with the photos of the screens because at a certain point I think the monitors were broken so they couldn’t realize the other projects anymore so now we will digitalize this and make it also available for research because I think it also is a valuable source for people to see what the proposition were like and some pictures of the screens.

(WB)

It’s a real work of archaeology! People always told me that for me it’s easy to make archaeology because the paintings and sculptures are so hard and so long sustained so you can restore them. But now with digitalized era, that is quite new, you explain how there is also an archaeology there!

An interview by Sofie Ruysseveldt & Dagmar Dirkx
The 1970s

Commissaires
Dagmar Dirkx, Niels Van Tomme

Recherche
Dagmar Dirkx, Sofie Ruysseveldt, Erien Withouck

Recherche d'images
Emma Vranken, Daniel De Decker

Edition de texte
Anthony Blampied, Dagmar Dirkx, Inge Coolsaet, Laurence Alary, Niels Van Tomme, Björn Gabriëls

Traductions
Gorik de Henau (NL), Anne Lessebi (FR), Björn Gabriëls (EN)

Coordination du site web
Emilie Legrand

Conception et graphisme
Studio Le Roy Cleeremans

Website
Waanz.in

Éditeur
Niels Van Tomme / argos vzw

Archives
M HKA / ICC, New Reform Gallery / Roger D’Hondt, KMSKB, BOZAR, Art & Actualité, Jacques Charlier, Joëlle de La Casinière, Eric de Moffarts, Geneviève van Cauwenberge, argos, SONUMA

Bibliographie
Johan Pas, Beeldenstorm in een spiegelzaal. Het ICC en de actuele kunst 1970—1990, Lannoo Campus, 2005, 300 p. Jean-Michel Botquin (dir.), Le jardin du paradoxe. Regards sur le cirque divers àLiège, Yellow Now / Côté Arts, 2018, 448 p.

Numérisation
Onno Petersen, D/arch, CINEMATEK, VECTRACOM

argos remercie
Andrea Cinel, Anne-Marie Rona, ArtTouché, Chris Pype, Dominique Castronovo, Eric de Moffarts, Evi Bert, Guy Jungblut, Jean-Michel Botquin, Joanne Jaspart, Katarzyna Ruchel-Stockmans, Lastpost / Fabri3Q, Leen Bosch, Liesbeth Duvekot, Maryse Tastenhoye, Nadja Vilenne, Sandy Reynaerts, Veronique Cardon et tous les artistes, commissaires et chercheurs qui ont participés au projet de recherche

argos c'est
Amit Leblang, Anaïs Bonroy, Anne Leclercq, Dagmar Dirkx, Daria Szewczuk, Dušica Dražić, Eden Lamaizi, Femke De Valck, Francisco Correia, Guy Verbist, Hadrien Gerenton, Iakovos Sierifis, Indigo Deijmann, Inge Coolsaet, Isaac Moss, Jana Van Brussel, Jonas Beerts, Julie Van Houtte, Julia Wielgus, Katia Rossini, Katoucha Ngombe, Kevin Gallagher, Kianoosh Motallebi, Laurence Alary, Mar Badal, Maryam K Hedayat, Mélanie Musisi, Natalya Ivannikova, Niels Van Tomme, Rafael Pamplona, Riet Coosemans, Sander Moyson, Stijn Schiffeleers, Viktor Simonis, Yoko Theeuws

rile c'est
Chloe Chignell, Sven Dehens

argos remercie le conseil d'administration
Johan Blomme, Katerina Gregos, Olivier Auvray, Suzanne Capiau, Tom Bonte

Partenaires à 
Cinema Nova, M HKA, CINEMATEK, VUB, KMSKB, Meemoo

Financiers
Avec le support de Flandres, Eidotech, VGC Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie, Vlaams Audiovisueel Fonds, Ambassade Pays-Bas, Ambassade Slovénie, Instituto Italiano di Cultura, Gouvernement de la région Bruxelles-Capitale