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In 1989 John Baldessari and Hanne Darboven presen... more >> Galerie Greta Meert has been firmly established as a contemporary art gallery for over 25 years. Founded in 1988 as Galerie Meert-Rihoux, it changed its name after its founding director, Greta Meert, in 2006.\nIt opened with the first international show by the young German photographer Thomas Struth. In the same year exhibitions by Robert Mangold, Richard Tuttle and Louise Lawler followed.
In 1989 John Baldessari and Hanne Darboven presented their first solo shows, and in 1992 work by Donald Judd and early work by Isa Genzken were shown.\nFrom the beginning onwards, an important, focus has been put on Minimal and the Conceptual Art. The significance of photography in conceptual strategies was also fully understood, and as early as 1991 the Gallery was among the first in Europe to show artists such as Ian Wallace, Jeff Wall, Ken Lum, who have been collectively referred to as the Vancouver School.\nDuring the 1990s and in 2000 the program was further elaborated with artists such as Carl Andre, Robert Barry, Jef Geys, Peter Joseph, Shirley Jaffe, Sol Lewitt, Jean- Luc Moulène, Fred Sandback, Niele Toroni, Didier Vermeiren, Michael Venezia. The gallery also convincingly participated in the timely rediscovery of an older generation of Italian artists who had been eclipsed by the Arte Povera movement. These included Carla Accardi, Gianfranco Baruchello, Enrico Castellani and Mimmo Jodice, all of whom are now powerfully present on the art scene and market. In more recent years the selection of artists has been of a more prospective nature.\nThe gallery has amply demonstrated its commitment to a younger generation of artists whose work closely connects to the historically consistent and artistically coherent program: Eric Baudelaire, Iñaki Bonillas, Johannes Esper, Valerie Krause, Anne Neukamp, Tobias Putrih and Johannes Wald and the Belgian artists Edith Dekyndt, Stef Driesen, Sophie Nys, Koen van den Broek, Catharina van Eetvelde and Pieter Vermeersch