Quite a list this month! Almost 100 songs, most of them just released in March 2022, and as usual some oldies. Full-spectrum from Estonian polyphonic choirs to Horror Metal. Play in shuffle mode recommended
Category Archives: Petervan Productions
Petervan’s Delicacies – 22022022

As usual, an incoherent, irregular, unpredictable collection of interesting sparks. Handpicked, no robots. Minimalism in curation. Enjoy!
- About thinking about AI-based text-generation tools like OpenAI’s GPT-3 is as clairvoyants. By Rough Type
- About solitude and silence. Should all time be well spent? By Emma Singleton
- About virtual being real and the ethical implications. About David Chalmers
- One of the best trend bibles of this moment. By ARK Invest
- About the flaws of the Data is the New Oil metaphor. By David Birch
If you can’t get enough of these and want more, you can hang on to the firehose, the extended version of Petervan’s Delicacies in REVUE with loads of videos. Subscribe here: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/petervan
Petervan Studios – Update Feb 2022 – The Scaffold
Here is the latest update on Petervan Studios. The previous update already goes back to June 2021.
The family is good. Somehow, we managed not to get infected by the virus. We all got boostered and respected safety measures to the max. Most of my time, I spent home in my studio and only came out for some grocery shopping, some visits to art exhibitions, and delivering the taxi service to my daughter’s school and horse stables. Zero travel since October 2019, but I cannot say I miss it.
At this moment, it looks like we are getting out of the woods of the 5th Covid wave, and measures in Belgium are getting relaxed. Partying is allowed again as of 18 Feb 2022.
More importantly: my father is still alive and kicking, and he celebrated his 90th birthday in Sep 2022!
What else?
The Bricks Project
For those who remember, this is my “zen” project. Drawing bricks in silence. Many bricks. 8,255 Bricks at the time of writing this post:
Exhibitions
Since the last update, I visited the following art exhibitions:
Luc Deleu, De Singel, Antwerp, Aug 2021
Drawing Art, BOZAR, Brussels, Sep 2021
ING Laughing Art, ING Gallery, Brussels, Sep 2021
David Hockney, BOZAR, Brussels, Oct 2021
Masculinities, FOMU, Antwerp, Nov 2021
Re-Collect, FOMU, Antwerp, Nov 2021
Rinus Van de Velde, Tim Van Laer Gallery, Antwerp, Nov 2021
Train Modernity, KMSK, Brussels, Nov 2021
Fabrice Samyn, KMSK, Brussels, Nov 2021
Pop-Art, SMAK, Ghent, Feb 2022
Chaos, Alex Vervoordt, Wijnegem, Feb 2022
Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven, Zeno X, Antwerp, Feb 2022
David Claerbout – The Close, Brugge, Feb 2022
Luc Deleu inspired by Buckminster Fuller
Detail of painting by Rinus Van de Velde – 2021
Hippie Elias (Self portret) by Etienne Elias – 1970
Fabrice Samyn – Detail from Eve&Adam – 2018
Still from The Close – David Claerbout – 2022
Outdoors
Weather did not treat us well. My recollection is one of all shades of grey and lots of rain from August 2021 till Feb 2022. Only the beginning of Sep 2021 was decent. But I have some nice winter fog pictures from my strolls and bicycle rides:
Horses
Astrid made a lot of progress in horse-riding. She won the 2nd price at a local dressage competition, and she also enjoys jumping a lot.
Talking about Astrid, in Dec 2021 she celebrated her 16th birthday. Where has the time gone?
Traveling Without Moving project
Travelling without Moving (TWM) is a series of essays documenting my mental and philosophical journey in 2020-2022.
The main outline was published in November 2020, and in the meantime, several episodes have been released. Since the last Petervan Studios update, I published one more essay on “Studios”.
There are a couple more in the pipeline, but I have a hunch that these will morph into The Scaffold project (see later in this post).
Books
Check out my GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/3085594-peter-auwera
Some highlights
Until Proven Safe: The History and Future of Quarantine by Geoff Manaugh, Nicola Twilley
Where Is My Flying Car? by J. Storrs Hall
Reclaiming Art in the Age of Artifice: A Treatise, Critique, and Call to Action by J.F. Martel
Lichamen by Peter Verhelst
Petervan Rides
Since July 2019, I publish every month a Spotify List with new releases combined with some oldies from the 60ies, 70ies, and beyond. Search for “Petervan Ride” and select “playlists”. Subjective selection of course, as driven only by my personal taste (or lack thereof).
Here is the latest Ride from Feb 2022, still being populated as we publish this post.
I suggest you play it in shuffle mode, it enhances the surprise experience.
My Art Practice
I did not produce much artwork. I was very focused on a work-project that required all my attention and focus. I shared most of my recent art work via my Facebook page, or on this blog under the heading “Sine Parole”. Some “highlights” if I can say that about my own work:
Petervan Artworks © 2022 – Digital scribble on iPad
Petervan Artworks © 2022 – Digital scribble on iPad
Professionalisation of Petervan Studios Art Practice
As from March 2022, I will focus on the professionalization of my art practice. I have hired a coach to help me with that. We are working with a digital archiving platform with an API that is steering the show & tell of my analogue and digital artworks. There will also be an integration with a shopping environment, and an online VR exhibition environment. There is also a brand-new website for Petervan Studios in the making. This new online environment will also become the home for a new project, working title “The Scaffold”, see below
Freelance Projects
I have been deeply involved and committed as architect and head of design of an 100% on-line learning expedition running from Sep 2021 till Feb 2022. We just landed the closing session. We still want to produce a “scrapbook” that documents the journey by end Feb 2022. The experience came in two chapters. The first chapter was a technology refresh on digital identity, infrastructure, VR, Robotics, Web3, and UX. The second chapter was about developing a practice of innovation for wicked problems, and how to design for emergence in complex adaptive systems.
I had the chance to collaborate with professional facilitation and innovation partners, and a collective of “guides” – some really smart people – that helped us shape and deliver the content.
The Scaffold
The learning expedition mentioned above had a great impact on me and the way I look at “events”. I believe I am onto something that may be the start of a new “genre” of learning studios. And I have started talking and pitching to potential partners and investors. Here is the high-level pitch:
The Scaffold is a 100% online learning studio for creating new knowledge based on the passion of the explorer.
The Scaffold can be seen as a form of Pop-Up school and/or an experimentation-based learning playground.
The Scaffold is planned as a three-year research cycle, with cohorts joining an online virtual playground for six-month intensive high-impact expeditions where together with the faculty they will create new knowledge in collaboration.
The curriculum of the expeditions is composed of several interventions, interruptions, and provocations anchored in the reality of a client’s project. The project serves as a vehicle to trigger new and imaginative thinking.
The Scaffold is a “scaffold” for something much bigger, something that could lead to a movement and foundation for better futures.
More about that later, probably in the second half of 2022. I hope to have a first client cohort signed-up by then.
So, in summary, what’s next?
The plan for the coming months is to work/play on:
Professionalizing my art practice
Pitch and realize my project “The Scaffold”
So, that’s it for this edition. If there is something worth reporting, next update is for Sep 2022.
Warmest,
Petervan’s Ride – October 2021
This month’s collection of new releases, and some very few oldies. Try it out. Play in shuffle mode to improve the surprise experience. Enjoy!
Petervan’s Delicacies – 3 July 2021

As usual, an incoherent, irregular, unpredictable collection of interesting sparks. Handpicked, no robots. Minimalism in curation. There is a shitload of new stuff this month. I tried to be extra disciplined and clean out the obvious, and what you’ve probably already seen elsewhere. Spread the word. Enjoy!
- The REALIST Stack – Another brain-melt from Ribbonfarm on an engineering revolution underway
- Why we need to rethink the computer “desktop” as a concept – By Ben Zotto
- Spaceship Earth – Special Victions Unit – From one of my all time favourites Mickey McManus, who has hope from a number of glimmers of light.
- About the difference/overlap between systems thinking and design thinking – by Corneliux
- About mental wealth – by Dark Matter Labs
If you can’t get enough of these and want more, you can hang on to the firehose, the extended version of Petervan’s Delicacies in REVUE. Also in this edition with loads of videos. Subscribe here: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/petervan
Petervan Studios – Update June 2021 – The Right Balance

Here is the latest update on Petervan Studios. The previous update already goes back to November 2020, that’s more than six months ago, and a lot can happen in half a year.
It looks like we are getting out of the COVID woods. At least in Belgium infection and hospitalization numbers are down, and I got my second Pfizer jab on 5 June 2021, so I think I am good to come out of my cave.
Family is good, Astrid does well at school, Mieke loves the garden now that the summer is back, and I continue my art practice and some freelance projects.
What else?
My Art Practice
Due to COVID regulations, 2021 was a terrible year for doing artwork at the academy. I just can’t work with a mask on. I retreated to my own studio at home, but I miss the coaches, and the discipline/routine of going twice a week to the academy in Ghent.
Most of the specialisation courses of the academy were online via Zoom calls, and nothing beats the dynamic of face-to-face contact, and on-the-floor experimentation.
Not sure yet what I will do next year: back to academy or being super disciplined in my daily routine in my home studio.
I shared most of my recent work via my Facebook page, or on this blog under the heading “Sine Parole”. Some “highlights” if I can say that about my own work:

Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Big Blue – Acryl on Canvas – 100x120cm

Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Shape on blue – Acryl on Canvas – 60x50cm

Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Wild Black & White – Acryl on Canvas – 120x100cm
The Bricks Project

Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Drawing – Chinese Ink on Steinbach Paper – A1
Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Video – Brickonomics – Own soundscape
Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Video – Bricks City Animation
Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Video – Zen and the Art of Bricks Drawing
The Cow Project
Introduced as a plan in the Nov 2020 update, I got hooked on cows, if that makes sense. Whatever.

Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Cow-Vid-19 – Acryl on Canvas – 120x150cm
Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Cowonomics – Stop Motion Film

Petervan Artwork © 2021 – Digital CollageCow on chimney on grass with milk tetra packs.
Part of an assignment for the academy specialisation class
Exhibitions
Since last update, I visited following art exhibitions:
C-Mine, Tim Walker, Genk, Jan 2021
Z33, Palms, Hasselt, Jan 2021
Be Modern, Royal Museums of Fine Arts, Brussels, Jan 2021
Danser Brut, BOZAR, Brussels, Jan 2021
Lynne Cohen, FOMU, Antwerp, Jan 2021
Adrian Ghenie, Tim Van Laer, Antwerp, Jan 2021
Kunstuur, Mechelen, March 2021
Alechinsky and Aboriginals, RMFA, Brussels, April 2021
Silence, Axel Vervoordt, Wijnegem, April 2021
Luc Tuymans and AI, BOZAR, Brussels, April 2021
Superstudio Migrazioni, CIVA, Brussels, April 2021
Inge Decuypere, A Joly Boring Thing To Do, Oudenaarde, April 2021
Vincent Geyskens, M-Museum, Leuven, May 2021

Detail of a Karel Appel’s painting “Liggend Naakt” 1957 – Oil on Canvas

The founders of SuperStudio – Painting in Expo Migrazioni

Vincent Geyskens – in M-Museum – Leuven
Outdoors
We had a lousy winter in Flanders. I did some walks and bike tours, but not as much as I would love to do. Winter lasted till deep in spring with a super cold and rainy month of May. When June started, the sun was back in full force, up to a point where I started already longing for shadow.



Horses
My daughter Astrid loves horses, and that is an understatement. I have become her private taxi driver to/from the stables, and I spend quite some time watching her at the riding school. She needs it very much in this COVID year, and she can really disconnect from school. And on and with the horses, she is in flow. Look at her smile: it makes a father happy too!


Freelance
I am on a new interesting gig for a very respected client. With a small team, we are doing research on what is next-next in financial services, and the research will be followed by several workshops and a private experiential event/tour later in 2021.
This and the previous project in Shenzhen also helped me reflect on different types of workshops: sharing, teaching, mentoring, and inquiry-based workshops, some online, others in real life. I have some concrete ideas on how to bring these to market, together with a supporting team of facilitators, provocateurs, artists, and producers. Contact me privately if interested.
BANI
Already in 2018, Jamais Cascio coined the term BANI. See my post from Aug 2019 and Jamais’ update from April 2020. As mentioned before, I am working with some partners on a virtual multimedia workshop based on this framework, with a specific focus on possible responses to a BANI world. One of our partners got locked in another client project, so we put the project temporarily on hold.
Design Unbound
I am continuing my immersion in the work of Ann Pendleton and her insights in Design Unbound: Designing for Emergence in a White Water World. We have found a way to convey this complex material into a matrix-form, with video vignettes, so that the customer can pick and choose where they enter the learning journey.
To give you a sense of the intensity of this work: I have now weekly calls with Ann Pendleton to go through the scripts that will form the foundation of the video vignettes.
We have put together a team to design and deliver a corporate curriculum on this topic. Stay tuned on the “we” and the “curriculum”.
Pirate TV
I released the first episode of Pirate TV – Art Tribe Edition, with my friend Frank Poncelet from the Art Academy in Ghent
There is a very nice queue of artists who have agreed to be the guest in the subsequent episodes: some painters, video artist, and photographers. Initially, the plan was to have an episode every month as from March 2021 onwards. Working with artists and original content authors, I have learned to be patient and more careful in setting expectations on the when and what of the final deliverable, although the pressure of a deadline sometimes – but only sometimes – helps to get to a high-quality experience. We are getting there.
There are now two Pirate TV channels in the pipeline: the Art Tribe edition and the Business edition.
Traveling Without Moving project
Travelling without Moving (TWM) is a series of essays documenting my mental and philosophical journey in 2020-2021.
The main outline was published in November 2020, and in the meantime, several episodes have been released. So far, I have posted seven essays:
The next one will be about “Studios”, studios as a proven way of failing and recovering together, a repurposing of the architecture studio practice of practices. Hope you stay on board.
Books
Check out my GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/3085594-peter-auwera
Some highlights:
The Stack, by Benjamin Bratton
Crossover, by Cecil Ballmond
Making Art Work, by Patrick McCray
Ways of Seeing, by John Berger
Petervan Rides
Since July 2019, I publish every month a Spotify List with new releases combined with some oldies from the 60ies, 70ies, and beyond. Search for “Petervan Ride” and select “playlists”. Subjective selection of course, as driven only by my personal taste (or lack thereof). Next month, we’ll celebrate the second anniversary of these Rides. Time flies!
Here is the latest Ride from May 2021
I suggest you play it in shuffle mode, it enhances the surprise experience.
So, what’s next?
Since I officially retired from corporate life on 1 Dec 2020, I am completely free to do what I want, what gigs I accept, what clients I choose and reject, what I say and what I write. And if nobody cares, that is fine as well, as then I can really do what I want.
This “interesting” work still leaves me enough room and headspace for my art-practice. I wrote a post before on what I consider “interesting”. The keywords are: not done before, risky, and sensemaking through sense-breaking. I feel I have found a good balance and feel happy.
The plan for the coming months is to work/play on (random order):
The Fintech Next-Next Project
“Interesting” Freelance Work
Continuing my Art Practice
Release some Pirate TV Episodes
So, that’s it for this edition. If there is something worth reporting, next update is for Dec 2021.
Warmest,
Travelling without Moving – Inappropriateness
This post is part of a series of essays bundled under “Travelling without moving”.
Intro of that series can be found here.
Petervan Pictures © 2021 – Travelling Without Moving
After the Foam-post of begin April 2021, we continue with “Inappropriateness”, an ambiguous feedback from a client on a rejected project.
In her post “The Change Refusal” https://weneedsocial.com/blog/2021/4/8/the-change-refusal, Céline Schillinger describes the weird situations where she submitted an idea, it was accepted, and then… was not given the permission, the support, or the means to carry it forward.
I had a similar experience not so long ago.
With a small team, we were contracted for a corporate experiment with Pirate-TV, a novel crossover video production.
Depending on whose point of view, it went well to not-so-well.
The production team was and still is super-proud of and committed to the deliverable. But at the very end of the project, the client believed our work was “inappropriate” and banned us from replay.
My good friend Peter Hinssen (Founding Partner of nexxworks) warned me early in the project “Boy, you are in for some fights if you want to pull this one off!”. I shrugged; I had crossed many other bridges over troubled water before.
The project started promising. The client accepted our proposal and briefing to do something radically different. Different in content, mixing, rhythm, visual collision and poetry, that sort of thing. Different, but relevant. Relevant to the ambiguity and uncertainty of the white-water world we are drowning in.
Not a Zoom style webinar with a speaker and a slide deck, or worse, a “fireside-chat” of two boring executives and a CNBC style of journalist, 2 meters apart from each other in white leather seats in front of a green screen that is then filled in with some fake backdrop to look cool.
So off we went. Everything went quite smooth. Too smooth in hindsight.
There was one hick-up in the process. A senior director who did not understand “why the heck we were doing this” almost stopped us. We scheduled a meeting to explain and understand her feedback. “All right, I get it now, make sure you integrate my feedback and questions, but without mentioning my name”, she said.
We incorporated the feedback and answered the questions. We delivered what we believed was a professional end-product, 100% in line with the brief.
But at the very last minute another senior person in the client’s organization intervened from the top, we got banned, and that was end of story.
The explanation? The work was considered “completely inappropriate”.
A request from our side to have a conversation was not honored.
Was it the format that felt too heretic to the executive leadership? Was it something else? We can only guess.
And what does that mean “inappropriate”?
As I was writing this post, I bumped into a presentation about contextual integrity. The talk was in the context of privacy, but I liked the breakdown to be very “appropriate” for my argument.
I believe the rejection had indeed to do with contextual integrities not being well aligned.
If inappropriateness is the opposite of appropriateness, then that would mean that inappropriateness is about not conforming, not meeting the expectations. That the result is illegitimate, not worth defending, morally not justifiable.
So, in other words, we did not conform. Thank God! What a compliment! The brief was to be radically different, no?
We requested if we could release the production under our own brand, “appropriately” edited not to reveal the name and the business of the client. But unfortunately, the client decided we were not allowed to re-use the raw footage. Hour and hours, days and days of brainstorming, recording, editing, soundscaping, video production down the drain.
No worries. We’ll be back. We decided to re-do the whole bloody thing on our own budget, our own tastes, our own reclaimed freedom.
Since then, we have redacted the scripts for the new recordings, did extra research on the content material, and developed a virtual mosaic leaving the audience the choice where the enter the show, and how to complete the narrative journey. It will be the first episode of Pirate TV – Business Edition.
When will it be ready? Shall we say in a couple of weeks? Working with artists and original content authors, I have learned to be patient and more careful in setting expectations on the when and what of the final deliverable, although the pressure of a deadline sometimes – but only sometimes – helps to get to a high-quality experience.
Looking back at Celine’s themes for dealing with rejected work, I believe we went through the full loop. Asking to understand and reframe together with the first senior director, getting banned, avoided, and then picking up the pieces and creating the context for success in our upcoming re-do of the project on our own terms and conditions.

Courtesy Céline Schillinger
As creators, we must take risks, break sense, practice free play imagination.
Sometimes, we must be on the err side of things to know how it tastes.
In that sense, this experience was very rewarding.
Being banned even felt a bit heretic, and almost a badge of honour.
Next time in Travelling Without Moving, we’ll talk about “Studios”, as a proven way of failing and recovering together, a repurposing of the architecture studio practice of practices.
Hope you stay on board.
Warmest,
Petervan’s Delicacies – 9 May 2021

As usual, an incoherent, irregular, unpredictable collection of interesting sparks. Handpicked, no robots. Minimalism in curation. Enjoy!
- Ben Thompson of Stratechery is always worth a read. About Market-Making on the Internet
- An illustrated compilation of hybrid creatures of our time, equally inspired by medieval bestiaries and observations of our damaged planet.
- Carlos E. Perez in search for a verb for self or identity.
- For once not about crypto etc. Just some observations of a beekeeper watching bees as a fascinating example of a natural, decentralized system. By Phil Windley.
- Gerd Leonhard and friends just launched the Fork In The Road Project. This is a call for global action on 4 existential topics. Consider joining and signing the manifesto. First live online event on May, 13.
If you can’t get enough of these and want more than 5 articles, you can hang on to the firehose, the extended version of Petervan’s Delicacies in REVUE. Also in this edition with loads of videos. Subscribe here: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/petervan
Petervan’s Delicacies – 3 May 2021

As usual, an incoherent, irregular, unpredictable collection of interesting sparks. Handpicked, no robots. Minimalism in curation. Enjoy!
- Human systems are now so radically interconnected and interdependent that there is no avoiding this phase transition. By Patrick Hollingworth
- Great overview of the history of management by Niels Pflaeging. Mary Parker Follett vs. Frederick Winslow Taylor.
- Fascinating piece by Bratt Templeton on how much and what else AI-driven maps see what humans don’t see.
- Provocations for people working now to build tomorrow’s systems. By Omidyar and The Guild of Future Architects.
- Excellent long read by Benjamin Bratton who thinks in novel ways about “stacks” and what this means for governance. Below a talk by the same author.
If you can’t get enough of these and want more than 5 articles, you can hang on to the firehose, the extended version of Petervan’s Delicacies in REVUE. Also in this edition with loads of videos. Subscribe here: https://www.getrevue.co/profile/petervan






















