Exhibited Works
Informations
Zone de contact
Group exhibition featuring : Laurianne Bixhain, Eric Chenal, Rozafa Elshan, Lisa Kohl, Bruno Oliveira, Armand Quetsch, Daniel Reuter, Romain Urhausen, Daniel Wagener
Curated by : Raya Lindberg
Opening : Friday 23 January 2026 at 18:00
Nosbaum Reding Gallery in Brussels is pleased to announce its new exhibition, Zone de contact, which will run from 22 January to 7 March 2026 and is curated by researcher and art critic Raya Lindberg.
With this show, Nosbaum Reding revives its long-standing photography programme, which has previously featured numerous Luxembourgish photographers, including Martin Linster, Yvon Lambert, Eric Chenal, Carine and Élisabeth Krecké, Daniel Reuter, Sébastien Cuvelier and, more recently, Yann Tonnar.
The exhibition also provides an opportunity to reaffirm Luxembourg’s commitment to the promotion of photography, a tradition that began with photographer and curator Edward Steichen, whose UNESCO-listed The Family of Man enjoys worldwide renown. Luxembourg can pride itself on its international recognition in the field of photography, continually promoted and supported by institutions such as the Centre National de l’Audiovisuel (CNA) and Konschthal Esch, as well as through the country’s ongoing presence at the prestigious Rencontres photographiques d’Arles since 2017.
Focusing primarily on Luxembourgish photography, the exhibition brings together pioneering figures and younger practitioners whose work explores the spatial possibilities of the photographic medium. The selection encompasses a wide range of techniques and artistic approaches that question how photography and the photographer’s gaze connect objects, bodies, places and documents. Zone de contact thus allows viewers to appreciate a diversity of social, intimate and symbolic interpretations of the world, as expressed through the work of nine Luxembourg-based photographers. Each artist’s distinct conception of the photographic image relates to an environment conceived as a “zone” — an in-between space reflecting both imaginative forms and ways of seeing and observing reality.