This Couple Will Wed In Every Country With Same-Sex Marriage For Stunning Project

The women want the project to stand as a 'time capsule' for LGBTQ equality.
Artists Fleur Pierets (right) and Julian Boom will travel to all 24 countries where same-sex marriage is the law of the land for their new performance art piece.
FLEUR PIERETS AND JULIAN P BOOM
Artists Fleur Pierets (right) and Julian Boom will travel to all 24 countries where same-sex marriage is the law of the land for their new performance art piece.

Two European artists who happen to be a real-life couple are teaming up for a compelling performance piece that will take them around the world on behalf of LGBTQ rights.

Fleur Pierets and Julian Boom, who have been together for seven years, are planning to have a wedding in each of the 24 countries where same-sex marriage is legal. The artistic duo, known as JF Pierets, are mum on specifics of the project, titled ’22′, but told HuffPost they will take photos and shoot video for an art installation to be exhibited at the conclusion of the project, currently slated to end in October 2018.

Pierets and Boom married in Belgium in 2012 and had been living in Spain for three years, but have since sold most of their possessions and will be travelling the globe with just one suitcase each. They’re currently based in New York, where they’ve begun pre-production on the project in advance of their first wedding, which will take place at Manhattan’s City Hall in September. From there, they’ll be spending two weeks in each of the 24 countries, starting with the Netherlands in October and ending in New Zealand by October 2018. (Check out their full itinerary here.)

The couple, who wed in 2012, will shoot photos and video as they marry again in each of the 24 countries as part of the project, titled '22'.
FLEUR PIERETS AND JULIAN P BOOM
The couple, who wed in 2012, will shoot photos and video as they marry again in each of the 24 countries as part of the project, titled '22'.

“Every work is a self-portrait of what and how we feel at that specific moment in time. We’re always trying to visualise the questions we ask ourselves on a daily basis,” Pierets, a Belgian native, told HuffPost.

The idea for ’22′, she added, came about because the pair found “that not many people are aware of the fact that there are so few countries where same-sex marriage is legalised. We figured that marriage and love ― something that everyone can relate to ― is a perfect starting point to raise awareness.”

As the project’s title suggests, Pierets and Boom began planning their creative excursion when only 22 nations recognised same-sex marriages. Since then, Malta and Germany have joined the list, with Australia also looking poised to follow suit. At present, there are no plans to rename the project because the pair want it to stand as a “time capsule” that will “show that the world is in constant movement”.

Together, Pierets and Boom are “looking very much forward to all the shifts that will ― hopefully ― happen while on the road.”

“It’s a journey we take one step at a time. Otherwise it could become something daunting instead of the celebration that it should be,” Boom (left) told HuffPost.
FLEUR PIERETS AND JULIAN P BOOM
“It’s a journey we take one step at a time. Otherwise it could become something daunting instead of the celebration that it should be,” Boom (left) told HuffPost.

“Our work is trying to capture current times and how the world functions on the level of gay and gender equality ― how it is changing and evolving,” Boom, who originally hails from the Netherlands, said. “It’s enriching and necessary to show these perspectives in a positive and beautiful manner because I belief this is the only way by which you can make change.”

As they set out to traverse the world, Pierets and Boom certainly have their work cut out for them, but ultimately, they believe their efforts will be worth it.

“Obviously there is lots of planning and practical things to be taken care of. But foremost we want to use this time to get inspired, connect with people, make new work [and] collaborate with other artists,” Boom said. “It’s a journey we take one step at a time. Otherwise it could become something daunting instead of the celebration that it should be.”

Pierets added: “Have you read Kafka? That sums it up.”

Head here to read more about ’22′ and check out other JF Pierets projects here.

This article originally appeared on HuffPost.

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