'Earth not a globe': Philippe Braquenier
Earth not a globe is a project that focuses on the Flat-Earthers, a community of people who believe the earth to be flat.
The Ravestijn Gallery opens the new year with a solo exhibition Earth not a globe by Philippe Braquenier, nominated for the Louis Roederer Discovery Award 2020.
The continents float on an endless ocean which somehow has a layer of rock and fire underneath it. Earth is a disc under a glass dome and the lands we know are surrounded by an infinite wilderness of ice and snow, beyond the Antarctic ocean, bordered by a 150-foot-tall circular ice-cliff. What we call the North Pole is at the center of the earth. Sun and moon are spheres that move in circles above the plane of the Earth. Like spotlights, these celestial spheres illuminate different portions of the planet in a 24-hour cycle and allow us to see the firmament during the night. GPS devices are rigged to make airplane pilots think they are flying in straight lines around a sphere when they are actually flying in circles.
Earth not a globe is a project that focuses on the Flat-Earthers, a community of people who believe the earth to be flat. Walking around on the planet's surface, it looks and feels flat, so Flat-Earthers believe what they see to discern the true nature of the world around them and, in other ways, see only what they believe. They say our eyes can’t be trusted but only refer to empirical approaches. They make extensive use of photomontages and videos as propaganda weapons while rejecting globe images as fabrications of a "round Earth conspiracy" orchestrated by NASA and other government agencies.
The project’s title takes its origin from books written by Samuel Birley Rowbotham in 19th century. The Flat-Earth conjecture has flourished in the modern era thanks to the proliferation of communications technology that have given individuals a platform to spread pseudo-scientific ideas and build stronger followings. The belief that the Earth is flat has been described as the ultimate conspiracy theory. Conspiracy theories are appealing because they offer simple explanations for complex phenomena, or because they let people believe they are in possession of secret knowledge that the powerful wish to suppress. They become prophets who know an information that the rest of the world is just too blind to see.
Photography and films hold in our society a strong cultural and political power of determination. Images, whatever their origins, have become the instruments of knowledge, of argumentation and of influence. As a photographer using a documentary approach with a 4 x 5 camera, Braquenier implies having done a truthful documentary work on this community while everything is staged. Every image takes its inspiration by the Flat-Earther mythology and recreates a real scene or shared photomontage.
Through various corpus of mediums, Braquenier uses his authority as an artist to question the act of seeing in a post-truth era. His goal is to explore that facts are purely subjective, that truth has become a suspicious notion, that reality is a social construct and that humans are intrinsically biased.
Philippe Braquenier (b.1985, Belgium) received his BFA in photography from the HELB and has exhibited in Aperture Foundation in New York, The Venice Biennale 2018 and Foto Museum Antwerpen (FOMU) among other institutions and galleries. His work has recently been published in Wired, Wall Street International, Wallpaper, and BLOW Magazine.
For more information please don't hesitate to contact the gallery.
E: info@theravestijngallery.com
P: +31 20 530 6005
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Philippe Braquenier, Fading moon and two wondering stars, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Buoyancy and density, gravity doesn't exist, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Star trail around Polaris #2, 2020
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Philippe Braquenier, Perspective ramp, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, Mad Mike Hughes rocket launch, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, Propaganda van, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Rainbows are reflections of the dome firmament, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Southern stars rotation and sacred geometry, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, Spinning globe, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Star trails 20° North, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Star trails around Polaris #1, 2020
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Philippe Braquenier, Fragment of the firmament, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, Jerry, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, Mirror observation, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Stratospheric box , 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, The flattest place on earth, 2016
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Philippe Braquenier, The moon and the sun are the same size, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, The planes help to prove the plane, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Three suns effect in Antarctica, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, True perspective, 2016
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Philippe Braquenier, Analemma #1, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, Mark, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Sunlight is small and localized, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, The moon emits cold light, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, No rocket ever went into space, 2016
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Philippe Braquenier, Cast shadows are always equal or bigger, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, 4 miles laser test shows proof of no curvature, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Zetetic astronomy , 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Vanishing point, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Sun splitting the line of the horizon, 2016
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Philippe Braquenier, Unparralleled sun rays, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier, Total solar eclipse, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, The sun is close, 2019
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Philippe Braquenier, They hid the sky away, 2018
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Philippe Braquenier: Earth Not A Globe
Sophie Beerens, GUP, May 6, 2021 -
Bewijs maar dat de Aarde niet plat is
Astrid Hulsman, PF Magazine, April 22, 2021 -
De aarde is rond. Ja, klopt, maar hoe weet je dat zo zeker?
Thomas van Huut, NRC, April 1, 2021 -
"Earth Not A Globe"
Aesthetica Magazine, April 1, 2021 -
Het FD over de tentoonstelling "Earth Not a Globe" van fotograaf Philippe Braquenie.
Jeroen Bos, FD Persoonlijk, February 6, 2021 -
De volkskrant bespreekt kunstwerk The planes help to prove the plane van Philippe Braquenier
Sarah van Binsbergen, Volkskrant, February 4, 2021 -
Seeing & Believing
Aesthetica Magazine, January 29, 2021 -
Expositie galerie fotografie Philippe Braquenier
Jan Pieter Ekker, Het Parool, January 28, 2021