EN

Calling from Work

by

Karel van Laere

Karel left a message for you

0:00/1:34

A warm lamp casts golden light over a sofa and carpet, as if you've stepped in someone's living room. On the opposite side, a sleek screen on a pedestal shows Karel van Laere on the phone with his parents. Calling from Work (2025), atop a concrete truck in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. 

Both surreal and tender. The industrial truck contrasts the familiar setting you find yourself in. During a residency in Taiwan, Karel called his parents in the Netherlands every week, bridging continents with an ordinary, intimate act. A conversation in which he existed in two realities at once: at home with his parents and at the same time on the other side of the world. You’re invited to sit down and overhear a private moment – and to reflect on distance, connection, and the absurdity of maintaining intimacy in a globalized world.

Year

2025

Type

mixed media

Length

12:02 min

Work in Progress

In preparation for his solo exhibition at the PIER 2 Art Center, Karel spent three months in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Every week, at exactly 4 PM, he scheduled a phone call with his parents. Inspired by this simple ritual, the artist assembled a film crew from Kaohsiung and Taipei to bring Calling from Work to life. Innocently calling at the scheduled time, his parents weren’t aware he was making an artwork at that moment. The videowork became central to the exhibition, including a live performance during the opening within the gallery space. 

“How important is it to know exactly where someone is?”

What does it mean to “go to work”, when your work is balancing on top of a moving concrete truck? How do you explain that this, too, is part of being an artist? Will they understand the research, the risk, the strange decisions that only make sense later? Artistic labor is often invisible, difficult to summarize, and rarely fits into the comforting predictability of a job title. Parents want to know if you’re safe, stable, earning a living – while an artist lives through curiosity, intuition, the urge to follow an idea wherever it leads. A tender misunderstanding, filled with deep love. For Karel, the conversation itself is secondary; it’s the contrast between his parents’ voices and the extreme location he occupies that creates an absurd reality. How important is it to know exactly where someone is?

Trivia

If you stay to listen to Karels walk for a full loop, there is a frame at the end in which the full truck is visible. Karel is 4,5 meters above the ground!

Upon his exhibition at Villa, Karel’s work was featured as Artwork of the Week in Volkskrant – something his parents were undoubtedly proud of. The week after, they came by the museum and sat on this very couch!

About Karel van Laere

Karel van Laere (1988) is a performance and visual artist, who explores the tension between the human body and technological systems, often questioning the boundaries of presence and absence. Through meticulous attention to detail and immersive staging, Karel’s work transforms everyday acts into experiences that are simultaneously absurd, vulnerable, and quietly profound.

Collaboration plays a central role in his practice: Karel has worked with dancers and actors, but also with surgeons and firefighters – inviting new perspectives. Together, they transform everyday actions into experiences that are absurd, moving and reflective.

He studied Performance Art at the Theatre Academy Maastricht (2012), Visual Art at Taipei National University of the Arts (2013), and at the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten (2024). Karel is currently based in Amsterdam.

Calling your mother

Over het werk van

Karel van Laere

What if, like a computer, you could switch your body off completely from time to time? No thoughts, no sensations, no movement, no feeling. What would such a state bring? This question became the starting point for Karel van Laere’s project The Non-Present Performer in 2017.

The state that came closest to what he was looking for was anesthesia or a spinal injection. So he approached an anesthesiologist. His idea to do a live performance while under anesthesia turned out to be impossible. But the anesthesiologist convinced him of the power of hypnosis in this context.

The work that followed placed Karel under hypnosis by a hypnotherapist. He then handed his body over to a choreographer and three dancers, surrounded by a live audience. He asked the dancers to push physical boundaries, to experiment, and to make him—the Non-Present Performer—the subject of their exploration.


A question

Almost ten years later, The Non-Present Performer still shows the central question in his practice: what does it mean to have a body? He is curious about the limits of his own body and drawn to the tension between that body and technological systems.

Every work begins with a single question about the body, a question that sounds absurd at first but, once asked, is also fundamental. Everyone has wished they could switch themselves off at some point. That meeting of absurdity and the fundamental runs through all of his work—both in the questions themselves and in the form the artwork takes.

Have you ever seen someone under anesthesia on stage?

The questions that drive his projects are often so specific that he collaborates with professionals outside the art world—surgeons, firefighters, a masseur, actors, and, as in this case, an anesthesiologist and hypnotherapist. This makes his work connect with everyday reality, in the street and in public space.


Physical contact

In the past two years, the question of contact has become central for Karel. How does a body make contact with the world outside itself? During his time at the Rijksakademie in 2024, he developed Contact. He became acutely aware of the different norms and habits around physical touch—his own and those of others.

He started recording every form of touch. Handshakes, accidental bumps of an elbow, the smallest physical interactions. At the end of each day, for a full year, he wrote them all down.

This diary of encounters gradually transformed into a performance where the hands of the audience played the leading role.


Walking on liquid concrete

In Villa’s exhibition, his latest work Calling from Work (2025) is shown. He spent three months in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, and called his parents once a week.

In the film we see Karel walking on a concrete mixer truck. Taiwan builds at enormous speed, and the cities are full of these trucks. They symbolize the country’s growth and its collective gaze toward the future.

A concrete truck keeps turning so the cement remains liquid during transport. The machine must not stand still. This clumsy giant makes sure a heavy substance stays smooth and fluid.

Every week, during his stay, he phoned his parents. Ordinary conversations about the weather, about food. “Mom, did you sleep well?” During those calls, Karel always knew exactly where his parents were—on the couch in the living room, next to the Wi-Fi router. Meanwhile, they had no idea where he was. They couldn’t picture his new surroundings on the other side of the world.

For the conversations themselves it made no difference, yet the contrast between their voices and the places he walked through created an absurd reality for him. How important is it, really, to know exactly where the other person is?

On the rotating concrete truck, Karel calls his parents. They don’t know he is making an artwork at that moment. We only hear Karel’s voice—the sounds on the other end of the line are not recorded. And yet, everyone will recognize a conversation like this.

“Yes, I’m doing fine.”

It’s a funny image: that massive, spinning concrete truck filled with tons of wet cement, while the artist casually chats with his parents about the weather. At the same time, that everyday conversation exposes the whole world—the contact between mother and child.

The video shows a form of love. She speaks more than he does. She likes to share details about groceries, about friends she has met, or how his father is doing.

A weekly chat, repeated like a groove in a record. Not for what is being said, but simply to hear each other’s voices.

In the end, asking about sleep or the warmth of the day is just another way of checking if the other is safe. It’s also a way to see if you can still make contact with that body so far from home.