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Saturday 5 September
Grand Opening – Our New Antwerp Location

Sunday 6 September
Festive Opening – Brussels

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Annea Lyvv Dreisz
Alle dagen cake!

Alle Dagen Cake

Blow the trumpets! Alle Dagen Cake, a series of paintings by Annea Lyvv Dreisz, emerged from the research she conducted for her Art’s Birthday cake Empire of Light at M HKA. In that work, the cake became a force of light against darkness—a critique of a society submerged in falsehoods, attempting to guide the public towards a state of eternal celebration, surrounded by angels and God.

During this process, Dreisz immersed herself in cakes of every imaginable kind, gradually building an extensive collection of references that she then began to paint. One cake a day. Like a meditation. A daily investigation. A daily celebration.

The title refers to Remco Campert’s book Alle Dagen Feest, drawing a parallel between baking cakes and painting them. Surrounded by the works of Magritte, Matisse, Gentileschi, Zurbarán and countless other painters, Dreisz transforms the cake into a painterly subject. From the textures of frosting to the vibrant colours of fresh fruit, each painting captures the essence of celebration. Through the medium of oil paint, the tension between light and darkness becomes tangible.

Every painting becomes part of the ever-expanding Empire of Light: an endless landscape of whipped-cream mountains, dazzling decorations and historical references hidden within the layered depths of the cake itself.

In the grandeur of eighteenth-century European painting, lavish cakes often symbolised wealth, status and abundance. Featured prominently in still-life compositions, they reflected both the skill of the baker and the cultural significance of food in rituals, festivities and communal gatherings. Dreisz draws upon this rich tradition, positioning the cake as a centrepiece for dialogue and a testament to the importance of the present moment.

When there is cake, you matter.

Each painting carries the title Centrepiece followed by the date on which it was made. Dreisz presents her cakes like a pâtissier displaying daily creations. Yet instead of being consumed, these cakes can be acquired, preserved and integrated into everyday life. The cake becomes a lasting presence.

In this way, cake turns into a form of currency, gently critiquing economic systems that prioritise profit over personal happiness, generosity and collective well-being. Throughout the process, Dreisz’s thoughts themselves become spongy, creamy, crusty and crunchy.

There must be hundreds of cakes.

Kingdom fights kingdom. Cake fights cop. Marie Antoinette strikes back.

Let’s go.

Frostings, meringues, buttercreams, fruits, ribbons and flowers. Bow your tie and tie your bow. One cake a day will suffice.

These cakes are symbols of celebration and liberation. They appear unexpectedly—even in the faces of the thieves who come to steal, to kill and to destroy.

Alle Dagen Cake!

“Dear, we shall have to make a cake!” I declared, banging the table with the authority of a general preparing for battle. It was a fateful proclamation, for little did I know that cake-making was a discipline not unlike navigating a minefield.


 

Location
Brussels
Date
 —

“When there is cake, you matter.”