Boulevard d'Ypres / Ieperlaan

Copyright artist(s) and courtesy argos

Artist(s)

Year

2010

Duration

01:05:00

Original format

DIGITAL FILE

Color

col.

Color system

PAL

Languages

Spoken: English UK , French , Dutch; Flemish
Subtitles: English UK , French , Dutch; Flemish

Availability

Distribution
Collection

The Boulevard d’Ypres in Brussels, with its large and colourful Mediterranean stores, offers glimpses of the Tales of the Thousand and One Nights. Urban development is now driving out these shops selling couscous, dates and olives. It is this turning point in the history of her own street that Vanagt uses as a starting point for a ’microhistorical experiment’. Vanagt converted one of the already empty stores into a film studio, and invited her neighbours – a mix of new inhabitants, undocumented immigrants, asylum-seekers, and shopkeepers – to come and tell a story, a fairy tale. Her approach is inspired by the Italian historian Carlo Ginzburg, one of the initiators of microhistory. This branch of history attempts to uncover power relations in society by focusing on details, and on the mental universes created by the men and women in the street. In ’Boulevard d’Ypres’, the histories are fictionalised by use of the third-person voice: ’he’ replaces ’I’. Thus, a mythical dimension is added, as if these tales form part of an oral storytelling tradition. Before the street changes into something new, before the empty store turns into a restaurant, a fitness centre, or an art gallery, the old store-house temporarily functions as a place of memory. The shop, the street, and the storytellers all find themselves at a point-zero of history. (www.balthasar.be)