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Notes
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- Statiekwartier district in Antwerp near the Central Station
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Antwerp, Belgium
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- In 1997, Tuymans made four temporary murals for the show Ons Geluk: Luc Tuymans, Danny Devos. The motifs were taken from two paintings and two drawings: Pillows (1997) and J. W. Gacy (1997), Traces (1997), and Missing Persons (1997). This show was staged in the Statiekwartier district in Antwerp near the Central Station. The exhibition space itself was inaccessible, so visitors experienced the installation through a window.[1]: 392 [2]: 104 : 427
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- 1997
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- Fundação de Serralves
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Porto, Portugal
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- In 1998, Tuymans created three temporary murals based on the works Wandeling (Walk) (1989) and Rotlicht (Red Light) from the triptych Heillicht (Curing Light) (1991), and the painting The Flag (1995) which were incorporated in the exhibition Privacy: Luc Tuymans, Mirosław Bałka at the Fundação de Serralves in Porto in 1998.[1]: 178, 264 [2]: 429
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- 1998
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- Poëziezomer (Poetry Summer) Watou
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Watou, Belgium
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- In the summer of 2001, Tuymans contributed two murals to the art and poetry exhibition Poëziezomer (Poetry Summer) in Watou. The first was a temporary mural based on The Heritage IV (1996) executed on floral wallpaper in a private house. The second involved the application of grey paint to the cobbled street and pavement in front of a row of houses, in shapes that mimicked the shadows of their gables.[2]: 438
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- 2001
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- Ruimte Morguen
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Antwerp, Belgium
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- In 2002, Tuymans created four murals based on drawings including Antichambre (1985), Study for Leaf (1986), and Hotel Room (1987). These were created for the group exhibition Kamers which he curated for the twentieth anniversary of Ruimte Morguen in Antwerp.[2]: 440
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- 2002
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- Künstlerverein Malkasten in Düsseldorf
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Düsseldorf, Germany
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- In 2002, Tuymans created four murals based on the paintings Gold (1999), Portrait (2000), and Eyes (2001), and the multipart drawing Missing Persons (1993). These were executed for his solo show Wandmalerei at the Künstlerverein Malkasten in Düsseldorf.
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- 2002
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- FRAC Auvergne – Fonds régional d’art contemporain Auvergne in Clermont-Ferrand
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Clermont-Ferrand, France
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- In June 2003, for the exhibition Curtains, Reconstitution at FRAC Auvergne – Fonds régional d’art contemporain Auvergne in Clermont-Ferrand, Tuymans created five temporary murals which related to the paintings The Rumour (2001), Morning Sun (2003), Navy Seals (2003), Plant (2003), Easter (2006), and three temporary murals that were not based on existing artworks, entitled Eurodisney, Imam, and Supreme Court.[2]: 414
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- 2003
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- Witte de With in Rotterdam
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Rotterdam, the Netherlands
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- Tuymans’ contribution to the group show Monopolis at Witte de With in Rotterdam in 2005 consisted of the temporary mural Twins and the painting Ballroom Dancing (2005).[8][2]: 448
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- 2005
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- Artetage – Museum of Modern Art in Vladivostok
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Vladivostok, Russia
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- In 2006, Tuymans contributed two temporary murals based on Dracula (2001) and Evidence (2005) to the group show Extremities: Flemish Art in Vladivostok at the Artetage – Museum of Modern Art in Vladivostok.[2]: 450
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- 2006
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- Mute
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Antwerp, Belgium
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- In autumn of 2006, Tuymans co-curated the exhibition Mute in reaction to the political situation in Belgium prior to the 2006 elections. At that time the far-right populist political party Vlaams Belang (the successor to Vlaams Blok, a far-right secessionist political party dissolved in 2004 due to its xenophobic activities) looked set to gain the majority vote in Antwerp and Flanders. The exhibition venue was close to the location where, in May that year, eighteen-year-old Hans Van Themsche shot three people. Tuymans’ contribution to the show was a temporary mural in charcoal that recalled the motif of Heart (1987).
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- 2006
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- Kabinett für aktuelle Kunst in Bremerhaven
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Bremerhaven, Germany
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- In 2007, for his second exhibition Ende (The End) at Kabinett für aktuelle Kunst in Bremerhaven, Tuymans created a site-specific work in the form of an ‘expanded’ mural. Eva Meyer-Hermann described the way Tuymans first painted the floor, walls, and ceiling with grey paint and how on this base, which changed tone depending on the time of day, he then painted geometric shapes in a lighter colour, which corresponded to the changing pattern of light that filtered through the windows. According to her, in art-historical terms, the mural evokes ancient traditions of painting windows and 'played with the concept of an open image that is not fixed in form but subject to change over time'.[3]: 380–82
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- 2007
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- Antwerp (inner-city location)
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Antwerp, Belgium
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- In spring 2008, the Belgian radio broadcaster Klara initiated an experiment which aimed to discover how many people would notice or recognize a work by an internationally renowned artist outside of a museum. For this experiment, Tuymans painted a temporary mural based on Exhibit #1 (2002) on the facade of a house in an unremarkable inner-city location in Antwerp. The mural could only be seen by the public for a few days, and over forty-eight hour period a hidden camera filmed passers-by. Only four percent of people filmed glanced at the artwork or stopped to look at it.
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- 2008
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- Haus der Kunst in Munich
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Munich, Germany
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- In 2008, the motif of Wonderland was used for a temporary mural created for the exhibition Wenn der Frühling kommt at the Haus der Kunst in Munich,[3]: 36 and Church inspired the mural executed for the exhibition Idź i patrz (Come and See) held at Zachęta – National Gallery of Art in Warsaw.[3]: 36
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- 2008
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- MCA Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Chicago, Illinois, United States
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- In 2010, the painting S. Croce (2005) and two works on paper, S. Croce 1 and S. Croce 2 (both 2010) formed the basis of the temporary mural created for Tuymans’ solo exhibition at MCA Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.[2]: 396
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- 2010
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- Meštrović Pavilion in Zagreb
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Zagreb, Croatia
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- In April 2012, for the exhibition Luc Tuymans: Allo!, the prints Plates (2012) inspired the temporary mural he created at the Meštrović Pavilion, a cultural venue and the official seat of the Croatian Association of Artists (HDLU) in Zagreb. In October, Die Nacht was created as part of the site-specific installation project Luc Tuymans: Die Nacht, Ten, Otwock: Season Two in Otwock in Poland. After the opening of the exhibition Constable, Delacroix, Friedrich, Goya at Staatliche Kunstsammlungen. In October, Die Nacht was created as part of the site-specific installation project Luc Tuymans: Die Nacht, Ten, Otwock: Season Two in Otwock in Poland. After the opening of the exhibition Constable, Delacroix, Friedrich, Goya at Staatliche Kunstsammlungen.
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- 2012
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- M HKA Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerpen
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Antwerp, Belgium
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- In 2014, Tuymans executed two temporary murals, one drawn from Simulation (2007) for the exhibition El Hotel Eléctrico at the M HKA Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerpen, and one based on Antichambre for the group exhibition De. Fi. Cien. Cy: Andrzej Wróbleswski, René Daniëls, Luc Tuymans at the Art Stations Foundation in Poznań.
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- 2014
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- Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Moscow, Russia
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- The motif of The Worshipper (2004) was used for a temporary mural created for the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art in 2015.
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- 2015
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- QM Gallery Al Riwaq in Doha
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Moscow, Russia
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- For his solo exhibition Intolerance at QM Gallery Al Riwaq in Doha in 2015, Tuymans executed six temporary murals based on Navy Seals (2003), Egypt (2003), Oostende (2003), Demolition (2005), Nuclear Plant (2006), and Silence (1991). The latter was later used for an outdoor mural in Antwerp shown from July 2016 to July 2017.[3]: 406–407 [2]: 420 [1]: 260
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- 2015
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- Museo Municipal de Arte Moderno in Cuenca
- Mural, acrylic on wall
- Cuenca, Ecuador
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- In 2018, the motif of The Return formed the basis of a temporary mural created for the XIV Bienal de Cuenca, Museo Municipal de Arte Moderno in Cuenca, 2018–19 and Twenty Seventeen inspired a temporary mural created for the Jakarta Biennale.[3]: 360, 414, 415
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- 2018
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- Mausoleum of Emperor Ferdinand II nearby the Graz Cathedral
- Fresco mural
- Graz, Austria
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- For the exhibition Last und Inspiration/Burden and Inspiration in 2018, the curator Johannes Rauchenberger invited Tuymans to show his work at a location of his choice in Graz. Tuymans chose an empty room in the crypt of the city’s mausoleum as the site for his second fresco mural, an image of a genetically modified crop, entitled Gene. This fresco was based on the existing artwork Plant (2003).[3]
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- 2018
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