Tine Colen

Works

About

Tine Colen

Walk a Mile in my Shoes

2025

Shoes (2019) made of marbled cedarwood with inlaid found semi-precious stones next to a pedestal (2025) of collected materials: stone, feathers, beads, drinking straw, shells, friendship bracelet, earring, bottle cap, ribbon, string, plastic, nettle, daisies, cattail, textile, paper, …

Het Orakel / The Oracle Gallery, the artist run space of Annea Lyvv Dreisz, will be housed in De Studio during Antwerp Art Weekend 2025 with the exhibition ‘Walk a Mile in my Shoes’. The Oracle will transform De Studio in a theatrical shoeshop.  An eclectic group of artists who have used shoes in their work practice will show a ‘shoework’. The shoe as a symbol of ones’ identity and belief never ceases to amaze. Even Van Gogh was very interested in the shoe as an inspiration for his paintings. The more worn out and muddy they were, the more psychological depth the shoe implied. Andy Warhol said once during his career: ‘I’m doing shoes because I’m going back to my roots. In fact, I think maybe I should do nothing but shoes from now on’. The Oracle believes if you want to know a persons personality look at their shoes! While the public is strolling around in their own shoes, contemplating different walks, the experience extends beyond the walls of the Oracle and De Studio. To highlight the theatrical aspect, the exhibition will swirl around the ever fascinating text of the song ‘Walk a Mile in my Shoes’ by Joe South, which deals with the subject of being human in a society that grows more and more inhuman. The Oracle puts it high on the table… and believes that ‘Walk a Mile in my Shoes’ will bring a strong message to the AAW25:
Walk a mile in my shoes
Yeah, before you abuse, criticize and accuse
Just walk a mile in my shoes!

Participating artists: the Oracle Group, Francis Alÿs, Tamara Beheydt, Machteld Bernaert, Guillaume Bijl, buren, Bodo, Christine Clinckx, Tine Colen, Annea Lyvv Dreisz, Elise El Yousfi, Laura Geurten, Kristin Karolina Helgadottir, Maarten Inghels, Hamer Körmeling, Albert Pepermans, Laurence Plumier, Guy Rombouts, Lieven Segers & Vaast Colson, students    4DE, Quinten Stimm, Johanna Trudzinski, Joke Van Canneyt,  Janine Vandebosch, Raphaël Vandeputte, Floris Van Look, Benjamin Verdonck, Liesbet Waegemans, Bernadette Zdrazil

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Works

About

After her training in the medium of painting, Tine Colen (1985) felt the need not to simply represent or imitate the world, but to be in the midst of things. Gradually, the following elements became characteristic of her work: The blurring of boundaries between art and functional objects by creating items that carry meaning and can sometimes be used / working with natural materials in a cyclical process, often defined by their temporary, seasonal nature, as well as human-made materials considered waste / seeking specific knowledge about plant usage through the study of ethnobotany and anthropology / a slow and labor-intensive making process, rooted in collective creation / generating value through the way objects are used, gifted, and passed on / using public space as a workshop, where the physical work sparks conversation, encounters, and change.

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