Christiaan Paul Damsté Dutch, b. 1944
Christiaan Paul Damsté’s metal assemblages form a powerful strand within his practice, rooted in a long-standing fascination with scrapyards and industrial remnants. Since the 1960s, he has worked across an unusually wide range of media—drawing, printmaking, painting, sculpture, and assemblage—developing an oeuvre that is both diverse and continuously evolving.
Within this broad practice, the metal works stand out for their directness and material clarity. Sourcing steel plates, beams, and fragments from industrial environments, Damsté composes his sculptures through a process of selecting, shifting, and balancing. Each element retains its traces of use—rust, wear, and irregularities—while becoming part of a carefully structured whole.
Although his work can be situated alongside post-war movements such as ZERO, minimal art, and constructivism, Damsté resists clear categorisation. His metal assemblages may recall the formal clarity of artists like Joost Baljeu or Carel Visser, yet they remain more intuitive and materially grounded. Rather than following a fixed system, he works through a process of negotiation—between order and coincidence, structure and intuition.
This refusal to settle into a single style is central to the strength of his work. Across decades, Damsté has continued to experiment, combining materials and approaches into a language that is distinctly his own. In the metal assemblages, this results in a form of abstraction that is both raw and precise—where industrial fragments are transformed into balanced, architectural compositions that feel at once immediate and timeless.