Peter Morrens brings his multifaceted oeuvre to M. His work includes paintings, drawings, photographs, installations and performances. Language, sound and image converge in his practice, in which knowing and not-knowing are inextricably intertwined. With disruptive humour and often searing images, the artist questions the things around him. His work is both playful and generous. It questions a wealth of conventions and prejudices, which lends it a provocative and contemplative character.

Peter Morrens (b. 1965) lives and works in Antwerp and teaches at the LUCA School of Arts in Ghent. Solo exhibitions include Club solo (Breda, 2023), Valerie Traan Gallery (Antwerp, 2022), de Warande (Turnhout, 2021), Les Brasseurs Art Contemporain (Liège, 2017), Loods 12 (Wetteren, 2016) and Art Page Gallery (New York, 2000). He is represented by Kristof De Clercq Gallery in Ghent, where he regularly exhibits.

Peter Morrens was co-founder and artistic leader (together with Rik De Boek) of artists’ initiative Voorkamer in Lier between 1996 and 2016.

His work is held in numerous private and public collections, including S.M.A.K. Ghent, the Flemish Community Collection and M Leuven. In 2022, Morrens was a guest at the Playground performance festival in Leuven. His work is currently on view in M’s collection exhibition, Doka.

Morrens’ multifaceted practice takes shape in a variety of media. He proceeds intuitively and associatively, using chance, doubt and unexpected links to shape his oeeeeeeuuuuvvre. Sowing the seeds of doubt is part of a deliberate strategy. Like a radio jammer, he plays with our expectations and need for recognizability. He encourages us to look and appeals to our imagination, with a keen eye for poetic beauty.

This exhibition presents a comprehensive survey of Morrens’ oeuvre from the past 35 years. New work, encounters and collaborations with other artists also have a place within an adapted architecture, in which Morrens seeks links with works from the collection of M. He presents his personal view of the collection on a monumental display case, which runs throughout the galleries like a connecting thread.