Woning Van Wassenhove is a house designed by Juliaan Lampens (1926–2019), built between 1972 and 1974. Albert Van Wassenhove, who commissioned the house, was a teacher with a passion for contemporary art and architecture. Lampens designed a house of concrete, wood and glass in which all living areas overlap as one open space. The warmth of the wood and the ever-changing play of incident light shatter the massiveness of the concrete.
Basic geometric shapes structure the interior: the sleeping area is a circle, the kitchen is a triangle and the office space is a square. But the house is more than just a game of shapes and lines as it manages to redefine our experience of living. After Van Wassenhove’s death in 2012, the house was bequeathed to Ghent University, which in turn entrusted it on long-term loan to Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens. opens and activates the house through visits, exhibitions and residencies for artists.
The residency provides a practitioner in any artistic visual field the time and space to reflect on and further their practice in the Woning Van Wassenhove. The resident will benefit from the support, communication and institutional network of Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens. In addition, the resident will, in consultation with Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, organise a public moment — talk, performance, publication, broadcast, presentation… — following the residency. The residency covers travel costs, a per diem and a production budget for the presentation moment.
https://museumdd.be/onderzoek/residentie-van-wassenhove
