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The photographs show spaces, environments that could be described as non-spaces, seemingly undefined, desolate, evoking the feeling of the uncanny. They create a sometimes oppressive and strange feeling that challenges the viewer and invites reflection. These spaces are imbued with a cinematic character, as if they were scenes from a story without beginning or end, in which the absence of human figures makes the space itself the protagonist.
Although… human presence is absent, its traces are unmistakable. The subtle clues we leave behind in the world around us - a forgotten object, a disturbed space - tell stories about who we are and what we leave behind. These traces add a layer of meaning to the images and invite the viewer to discover the untold story.
As a medium of light, photography often captures the ephemerality of moments, but here the fleetingness of the everyday seems to give way to stillness, enhanced by the nocturnal and dark nature of the surroundings.
Mark De Roeck, shaped by decades of practice across graphic design, advertising, and photography in Flanders and Brussels, approaches the image as a quiet act of construction. Rooted in visual storytelling yet resistant to the obvious narrative, his work draws from the legacy of the New Topographic Movement, where landscapes are distilled, flattened, and reimagined. The familiar dissolves into compositions of planes and lines, hovering somewhere between document and painting. His images invite stillness—an attentive pause in which the overlooked and the ephemeral begin to surface.