BAP editions
By purchasing a BAP Edition, you support the activities of the BelgianArtPrize. Each edition was created by a former laureate or nominee and comes with a certificate of authenticity. The artists' fees and production costs of the editions were financed by the Renilde Hammacher Fund (a former BAP member until 2014).
Edition Pieter Vermeersch

Pieter Vermeersch – nominated 2007
Without title 2022
Lambda print and screen print, framed
60 x 40 cm
Edition of 12 + 3 AP and 1HC
Price starting from 2.500 euros
Pieter Vermeersch creates colourful paintings with subtle gradations combining abstraction and figuration. His works combine time, space and substance arising from meticulous analytical observation. For this BAP edition, the artist took a macro photo of a golden vein in black marble and enlarged it on Lambdaprint. Afterwards, he enhanced the image with four screen prints, each staggered by a few millimetres. These layers create a spatial dimension and offer a captivating visual experience.
Edition Els Dietvorst

Els Dietvorst – laureate BAP 2021
Token for Humanity 2022
Box (32 x 22.5 x 5.5 cm) with bronze pocket stone, pyrographed driftwood and single watercolour in bistre ink (16.5 x 16 cm).
Edition of 20 unique boxes + 5 EA
Price 1.320 euros
During Covid, Els Dietvorst launched a project with the residents of her village in Ireland inviting them to put messages, thoughts or objects down on a rock during their beach walks. For this BAP edition, the artist made 20 boxes. Each box contains an original watercolour in bister ink, a twig she found on Irish beaches and worked with pyrogravures and a small bronze pocket stone. On the lid, Dietvorst printed a poem sung during one of her performances.
Edition Emmanuelle Quertain

Emmanuelle Quertain – laureate BAP 2015
Objets fragiles démocratiques 2022
Series of 7 unique works in glass
Sold out
Emmanuelle Quertain created several glass sculptures for this BAP edition, in collaboration with Belgian glassblowing studios, as a tribute to President Zelensky and the Ukrainian people. The glass refers to human and democratic vulnerability, thus highlighting the urgency of the situation in Ukraine. This way, Emmanuelle Quertain invites us to reflect on world peace and our democratic values.