Well*Ness
Cultuurcentrum Ter Dilft•Feb 22, 2026 — May 03, 2026
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Well*Ness is the new solo exhibition by the Ghent-based artist duo Robbert&Frank Frank&Robbert. The exhibition is structured around three recent journeys: the United Kingdom and Wales, Finland, and Bornem itself. On each trip, the artists brought along various sculptures that they activated in local forests, mountaintops, city squares, and more. They selected the locations carefully: they are invariably ancient places with water—think of stone circles, menhir fields, eternally frozen snow landscapes, swamps...
Water is therefore the core theme of this exhibition. Frank and Robbert play with the duality of water. On the one hand, it is soft and creates life. On the other hand, it is hard and has the power to destroy. This concept is reflected in the title: Well*Ness literally refers to 'well,' or 'the source' that gives life. 'Ness' is of Celtic origin and is believed to mean 'roaring water' or 'headland in turbulent water.' The roaring or turbulent water does not create, but…
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Well*Ness
Cultuurcentrum Ter Dilft•Feb 22, 2026 — May 03, 2026
Press Release
Well*Ness is the new solo exhibition by the Ghent-based artist duo Robbert&Frank Frank&Robbert. The exhibition is structured around three recent journeys: the United Kingdom and Wales, Finland, and Bornem itself. On each trip, the artists brought along various sculptures that they activated in local forests, mountaintops, city squares, and more. They selected the locations carefully: they are invariably ancient places with water—think of stone circles, menhir fields, eternally frozen snow landscapes, swamps...
Water is therefore the core theme of this exhibition. Frank and Robbert play with the duality of water. On the one hand, it is soft and creates life. On the other hand, it is hard and has the power to destroy. This concept is reflected in the title: Well*Ness literally refers to 'well,' or 'the source' that gives life. 'Ness' is of Celtic origin and is believed to mean 'roaring water' or 'headland in turbulent water.' The roaring or turbulent water does not create, but…























































