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The

Artist

Nominated in
2025
By
FOMU
Lives and Works in
Brussels / Liège
Bo Vloors (she/her b. 1993, Belgium) is a visual artist, writer, photographer and filmmaker living and working between Brussels and Liège. Her artistic work hovers between the complex yet fascinating realms of image and language, exploring human relations in association with and within their surroundings, and the influential power of images. Drawing analogies between human experiences, natural cycles and symbiotic arrangements, she explores the ambiguity of the human condition, while simultaneously questioning the influence of images on our collective and personal intersection of reality and memory. For several years now, she has been practicing the artistic pollination between the audiovisual art, photography and writing by maintaining an archive with her own photographs, written texts, audiovisual and field recording. In 2022, she returned more explicitly to photography which eventually led her to a growing interest in the dynamic between image and text, as she started approaching her writings not only as an essayistic, but as material, printed matter, linguistic and lyrical vocal arrangements, all within the broader sense of “image-making”. The formats she uses may vary from publications, spatial installations, audio-visual to audio-performative. Her work has been exhibited in several cinemas, institutes, galeries, theaters and off spaces, both nationally and internationally. Since 2019, she is an active member of the Paris-based art collective SPASS and co-founder of the revue Voyons Voir.
Projects
2025

The (ab)Use of Beauty, Chapter One

At first glance, "The (ab)Use of Beauty" may be perceived as a personal testimony of life at higher altitude in the mountains. However, when diving deeper into its content, the work takes a critically look at our desire for beauty, the use of applied aesthetics in photography and the medium’s limited representation of reality. In this work, which consists of both images and texts, registration and analysis are indispensable to one another. By presenting the written texts as The Missing Image, they become a mediator between ‘the image’ and ‘the real’, addressing the image’s limited representation of reality, the image-maker’s responsibility in relation to these representation, and the romanticized translation of reality that we often attribute to the photographic medium through the use of applied aesthetics. The (ab)Use of Beauty, Chapter One is the first chapter of an ongoing image–text book publication. The (ab)Use of Beauty is Vloors’ most ambitious project to date. Act of Reading The (ab)Use of Beauty, Chapter One : https://soundcloud.com/bovloors/theabuse-of-beauty)
2023

Collecting Time

Collecting Time is a vitrine installation that aims to reorientate our collective responsibility for rhythm, perception of time and progress by activating our collective awareness for a slower but more stable pace as a form of care. In a world where confidence in progress is a must, the speed of this progress is often regarded as the measure of success. Time became twice as precious and slowness is often perceived as counterproductive. While the rhythm of the city often jumps back and forth between fast and slow; open or closed; in motion or paused (which requires endless resilience that determines the life and well-being of its citizens), the cycle of nature embodies a much slower and steadier pace. The snail - one of nature’s many performers to embody this slow but steady pace - stands central in this vitrine installation and can as well be found across the urban landscape of Brussels, faithful to the animal's invasive nature.
2025

Presence of Liquid Passage, Passage of Solid Presence

"Presence of Liquid Passage, Passage of Solid Presence" draws a parallel between human transformation and the geological cycle of erosion. Drawing attention to the curves of slow spiraling, cyclical time, this image-text-based work guides us deeper into the realms of human tolerance and resilience, potential and persistence, longing and belonging, the communal and the individual, and the power to reclaim narratives. By incorporating a vocabulary related to natural phenomena into linguistic and lyrical arrangements, Vloors establishes analogies between the ambiguity of the human condition and the descending movement of water, the erosion of stone and the silence of caves, where ancient whispers of gentle resistance resonate. Installation view .tiff Emerging Belgian Photography, FOMU, Antwerp (2025) and Brakke Grond, Amsterdam (2025). UV-print on wall paper (200 x 130 cm), UV-print on dibond (80 x 60 cm), UV-print on dibond (15 x 80 cm), glass, wooden frame (black, boite americaine)
Bo Vloors
was nominated by
FOMU
in
2025
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

FOMU invites three external jurors to help select the artists. This year’s jury consisted of Laure Cottin Stefanelli (artist and .tiff 2019 participant), Bindi Vora (curator, Autograph in London) and Koi Persyn (curator and artistic director at Jester in Genk).

The jury made the selection based on the Fomu criteria:

1. Contemporary relevance
Everything we do is topical and relevant to modern society. We deliberately choose historical and contemporary subjects and projects that are interesting and relatable to a modern audience. We encourage reflection on societal issues and contribute to the prevailing social discourse.

2. Multivocality
We opt for subjects and projects that offer a multifaceted perspective on photographic imagery and the world. We also actively seek out and hold space for different views and perspectives and encourage the representation and involvement of creators from underrepresented communities and backgrounds.

3. Critical reflection on the medium and its evolution
Photography and reality have a multifaceted relationship. We are interested in the mechanisms of photography and deliberately work with photographers who critically engage with the medium or its history and are aware of artistic-conceptual positions and visual language.

4. Ethical position
Due to its complex relationship with reality, photography inevitably raises ethical questions. We are keenly aware of the context in which images emerge and exist. As a result, we always consider the intention and impact of images. We approach all images with the necessary caution and contextualise them within their historical context.

Fomu invited fellow Futures members to be part of the jury that would pick four artists from ten to join the Futures program. The jury consisted of Angel Luis Gonzales & Julia Gelezova of Photo Ireland and Daria Tuminas & Yusser al Obaidi of Fotodok.

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