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Exhibition “Bricks beyond walls”

27/02/2022 h 05/06/2022 F Add to the calendar 2022-02-27 2022-06-05 Europe/London Exhibition “Bricks beyond walls”

The exhibition "Bricks beyond walls" sums up all the work on bricks carried out by Aequo Design since it was founded in 2018. Set up by designers Tim Defleur and Arthur Lenglin, Aequo’s approach to design has a “territorial” slant. “Territorial design” can be defined as a creative process that draws on the territory from which it springs as its source. Its material, cultural, historical and geological riches are the systematic starting point for creativity. Beyond their aesthetic or functional value, objects become the narrative support for these sources of inspiration with local roots, bearing witness to a particular heritage. Brick also has a special place in industrial architecture because it is economical, fireproof and durable. The Grand-Hornu is the perfect example of this type of construction. Bricks are at the heart of the work of the Roubaix-based studio Aequo, whether as a raw material or a source of inspiration. This exhibition shows all their work with bricks and serves as a framework for the organisation of creative workshops with schools and groups of individuals, adults and children.These workshops will produce pieces that will be included in the evolving exhibition before they are taken up by budding artists. Looking forward to an ambitious exhibition bridging the gap between brick and design in 2025, this project is designed to be a technical and creative experiment, open to everyone, focusing on a reassessment of a common material with surprising potential.

Practical information

Centre for Innovation and Design at Grand-Hornu (CID), Rue Sainte-Louise, 82 7301 Hornu Centre for Innovation and Design at Grand-Hornu (CID)

The exhibition “Bricks beyond walls” sums up all the work on bricks carried out by Aequo Design since it was founded in 2018. Set up by designers Tim Defleur and Arthur Lenglin, Aequo’s approach to design has a “territorial” slant. “Territorial design” can be defined as a creative process that draws on the territory from which it springs as its source. Its material, cultural, historical and geological riches are the systematic starting point for creativity. Beyond their aesthetic or functional value, objects become the narrative support for these sources of inspiration with local roots, bearing witness to a particular heritage.
Brick also has a special place in industrial architecture because it is economical, fireproof and durable. The Grand-Hornu is the perfect example of this type of construction.
Bricks are at the heart of the work of the Roubaix-based studio Aequo, whether as a raw material or a source of inspiration. This exhibition shows all their work with bricks and serves as a framework for the organisation of creative workshops with schools and groups of individuals, adults and children.These workshops will produce pieces that will be included in the evolving exhibition before they are taken up by budding artists. Looking forward to an ambitious exhibition bridging the gap between brick and design in 2025, this project is designed to be a technical and creative experiment, open to everyone, focusing on a reassessment of a common material with surprising potential.

Practical information

Centre for Innovation and Design at Grand-Hornu (CID)

The CID – centre for innovation and design at Grand-Hornu aims to promote contemporary design through a programme of exhibitions and mediation activities, highlighting innovation, experimental research, the emergence of new themes and horizons for research in design, architecture and graphic art. By presenting the diversity of these creative domains, the CID raises the public’s awareness of a culture of design and architecture. It questions, studies and explains this culture through a dialogue with creators, researchers and also the public.

The CID aims to reflect our current society, by programming and producing three to five exhibitions each year, On the one hand, they echo individual practices and research through monograph exhibitions dedicated to Belgian or international designers, and on the other, thematic exhibitions develop a narrative thread that invites us to dream up and invent utopias. An entire mediation programme is organised around the exhibitions to enable these discoveries to be shared with the public, specialist or otherwise, attaching great importance to the adaptation of our visits and visitors).

LPeople with specific needs

We welcome people with reduced mobility. An electric car is available and you can park easily. For the visually impaired, a visit is possible upon reservation.

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Practical information

Centre for Innovation and Design at Grand-Hornu (CID)

Rue Sainte-Louise, 82
7301 Hornu

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