Step into the evocative world of Guillaume Van Moerkercke, where charcoal becomes a vessel for memory and sensation.
At first glance, his dark, layered drawings—depicting interiors, street corners, and landscapes—appear almost blank, their surfaces absorbing light like distant recollections fading at the edge of consciousness. Yet as you draw closer, intricate lines emerge from the depths, each mark resonating like a fragment of a far-away memory resurfacing into view.
Van Moerkercke’s technique gently distorts reality, cloaking familiar scenes in a foggy veil that both conceals and reveals. This interplay of revelation and obscurity invites viewers into a dreamlike experience: a space where perception shifts, memories oscillate between presence and absence, and the act of seeing becomes an intimate journey in itself.
