Exposition

The Grand Tour Experiment: A Transformative Traverse of the Picturesque Landscape (2025)

Rebecca J. Squires, Bart Geerts

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The Grand Tour Experiment: A Transformative Traverse of the Picturesque Landscape was a human-pulled carriage journey that re-envisioned the eighteenth-century traverse of the picturesque landscape, the subject-objectification of the view, and the imperialistic impulse behind the voyage pittoresque. This artistic experiment visually, kinaesthetically, and performatively explored the transformation from landscape to image that formed the basis of modern perception, as part of the colonial legacy inherent within the picturesque view. The Grand Tour carriage was pulled by human labour, evidencing the forced labour economy that impelled the European Enlightenment, while demonstrating in human terms, the use, abuse, and commodification of human and non-human animals. The Grand Tour proceeded from Binche to Brussels to Antwerp, Belgium in 2022. The Grand Tour experiment investigated the eighteenth-century picturesque gaze, which travelled unchecked over the landscape in industrialised Europe, a harbinger of the annexation and enclosure of land that had been commonly owned, traditionally used, or publicly accessible, while portending the colonisation of lands abroad. The picturesque gaze, an imperialist mechanism, still fragments the landscape, excising two-dimensional pictures from the three-dimensional world around us, a vestige and augur of the destruction of lands, cultures, and peoples. Shifting between early modern and contemporary perception, The Grand Tour bisected space and time in a cleaving manoeuvre, creating new fault lines in which multiple planes of space-time might co-exist. This experiment tested whether a new neo-picturesque framework could be forged in a dimension of space-time that alters according to the perception and orientation of the traverser, casting contingent new imaginaries into physical and psychic realms where they may or may not become realities, according to Arno Böhler’s philosophy as artistic research approach (2019). This experiment envisaged a plurality that did not exist in the eighteenth century but may have already been limned in its myriad contradicting, contrasting, and diverging modes of sensing and experiencing the world around us in a relational and now relative notion of space-time. Download Accessible PDF
typeresearch exposition
keywordsGrand Tour, Philosophy as artistic research, Picturesque aesthetics, The eighteenth-century landscape traverse, Leibniz's relationalism, Alain Roger's artialisation in visu, Imperialist gaze, Simultaneous and sequential space-time, Condillac's sensationism
date15/07/2025
published15/07/2025
last modified15/07/2025
statuspublished
share statusprivate
affiliationLUCA School of Arts, KU Leuven
copyrightRebecca J. Squires, Bart Geerts
licenseAll rights reserved
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/3440412/3440256
doihttps://doi.org/10.22501/jar.3440412
published inJournal for Artistic Research
portal issue35. 35


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