- Signing sessions and lectures
- Fairs
- Our New Year cards
- Window Projects
- Copyright Bookshop Antwerpen
- Copyright Bookshop Ghent
Copyright Bookshop Antwerpen
- 2024Artist Anne-Mie Van Kerckhoven signs ’33 women series’ in Copyright Anywerp
- 2023Monumental ceramic works by Belgian artist Antoine Vandewoude in the windows of Copyright Antwerp
- 2023Window display and book signing by Klaas Rommelaere following his publication ‘Johnny’ in Copyright Antwerp
- 2023Belgian Fashion Designer Edouard Vermeulen (Natan Couture) signs his book in Copyright Antwerp
- 2023Fashion designer Kris Van Assche signs his book ’55 Collections’ in Copyright Antwerp
- 2023Artist and architect Anne-Sophie Demare: a sculptural installation in the shop windows of Copyright Antwerp
- 2023Window display by Babs Decruyenaere for her publication ‘Understanding the Landscape’
- 2022Inge Grognard: Makeup 1989-2005. Window in Copyright Antwerp
- 2022Monumental shop window in Copyright Antwerp by Celina Vleugels
- 2022Photographer Marcel Lennartz, the Queer Arts Festival Antwerp en Copyright Bookshop
- 2022Isabel Miquel Arqués presents her book in the window of Copyright Antwerp
- 2022Artist Kasper De Vos transforms the windows of Copyright Antwerp
- 2021New bookcase in Copyright Antwerp designed by Vincent Van Duysen
- 2020Radio streaming by architecture magazine A+ for the publication URA, Yves Malisse & Kiki Verbeeck, Architectural Projects 2002-2020
- 2020Artist Werner Mannaers exhibits his works ‘Everything will go well’ as a positive message during Covid-19 in Copyright Bookshop Antwerp
- 1996First Copyright Bookshop Antwerp designed by architect Vincent Van Duysen
- 1997Exhibition in Antwerp ‘Haarstraat = Artstraat’
- 1996This discussion is culture’. Symposium about the role of the art gallery.
- 2001Copyright Bookshop Antwerp Nationalestraat
First Copyright Bookshop Antwerp designed by architect Vincent Van Duysen
1996
In 1996 we took Copyright to Antwerp. We found a location in Haarstraat, in the historic centre close to the Grote Markt. Architect Vincent Van Duysen converted two little houses into a small bookshop. To our pride and joy, several Belgian and foreign architecture and design magazines featured the design for its simplicity, functionality and attractiveness.