The K Art Signatures presents its latest exhibition, on view from May 23 to June 29. The vernissage takes place on May 23, from 5 PM to 10 PM. This exhibition runs in parallel with “Transitions: Fragile Balances of Ice and Fire” by Michel Bocart.
Each work in Floating Lights is not just meant to be seen, but to be felt — like an invisible breath within the space. This exhibition is an invitation to slow down, to contemplate, and to engage in a sensory experience where space, light, and weight are closely intertwined. Air becomes volume, light becomes surface, and the eye drifts through barely perceptible reflections. Balancing between precise geometry and delicate presence, Willem Wouters creates architectures of silence. In Floating Lights, he explores the boundary where material approaches immateriality. Through resin, light flows, spreads, and lingers. It never fully rests but seems to float — suspended in space, in a constant dialogue with emptiness.


Who is Willem Wouters?
Willem Wouters is a Flemish architect who creates resin-based artworks. He approaches the design of his sculptures with the same methodical care as his architectural practice. Over the years, he has experimented extensively with the technical properties of resin, developing a unique process to realize his creative concepts. His work demonstrates an architectural approach to form, texture, and color, using reflection and light to evoke shifting visual impressions. The result is a tension between transparent geometric shapes and sculpted voids that feel organic and intentional. This duality expresses a sculptural sensitivity that redefines the balance between solid and empty, opaque and transparent, interior and exterior. His finished works resemble small architectural entities. His minimalist philosophy is evident not only in concept but also in material. He works exclusively with resin, without combining it with other substances, resulting in unique, handcrafted pieces. Wouters studied architecture at KU Leuven’s Faculty of Architecture in Ghent and at the International University of Catalonia (UIC) in Barcelona. After graduating, he moved to Paris, where he spent eight years working for well-known international architecture firms. In 2015, he returned to Belgium to lead major projects at a prominent Belgian studio. Since then, driven by passion, he has focused entirely on creating his own art.



