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  • Report: Afropean at the Forum on European Culture

    Near the Patrice Lumumba University, Moscow.

    Photo: Johny Pitts
     
    Photo: Johny Pitts

    Report: Afropean at the Forum on European Culture

    November 1 marked the end of the exhibition 'Afropean', one of the Forum’s many successful projects. We look back at the highlights of this collaboration.
    3 November 2020

    The photo exhibition, masterfully curated by photographer Johny Pitts and Foam curator Kim Knoppers, officially opened on September 17. A day later, as an official programme part of the Forum on European Culture, the audience enjoyed a fresh look at Pitts’ photos just before finding their seats for a compelling and entertaining evening. It was inspiring and insightful discussion of Johny’s writing and his photography, moderated by de Balie’s programme editor Rokhaya Seck. Along with Johny and the moderator, speakers Francio Guadeloupe, Lisette Ma Neza and guitarist Orville Breeveld all related in their unique ways to the artist’s search for the Afropean identity. You can watch the programme below.

    Riffs

    The evening started with an almost instantaneous musical connection. Riffing off the main musical theme of Johny’s short film Afropean Express, Orville Breeveld played as if he had accompanied him for years; it made the delivery of Johny’s slam poem The Afropean Express an immediate success. Warm applause followed from the small audience gathered in the exhibition space at Foam.

    After this, multi-talented Pitts (who writes, photographs, makes film and plays music) expanded upon the early beginnings of the project, answering to the questions from moderator Rokhaya Seck. Young slam poetry performer Lisette Ma Neza, seated in the first row, scribbled along furiously and then delivered an inspired spoken word intervention that served simultaneously as punctuation and summary of the discussion, accompanied by Breeveld on guitar. She went on to perform her intimate and harrowing song I can’t breathe written in the wake of the murder of George Floyd. The combination of the words with an upbeat guitar pattern was at times eerie and uncomfortable but beautifully executed. 

    Author and photographer Johny PItts in action at Foam during the Forum on European Culture. Photo: Zsarà Grunfeld
    "Whole and unhyphenated" or "the dash as a bridge"

    The talk that followed between UvA anthropologist Francio Guadeloupe and Pitts focused on the question of the hyphen or the dash, zooming in on the denominative aspect of Johny’s quest and what a label can represent. Why would you spell Afropean as one word, and not use a word like Afro-European? Pitts: “I’d like to come up with a way of viewing the world that was whole and unhyphenated. I didn’t want to be half this half that, and Afropean could be a portal to it. I wanted to bed blackness into Europe. It’s a sort of a futuristic word that helps to piece the jigsaw together.” Guadeloupe: “the dash between a word like Afro-Caribbean is important. The dash is also a bridge and allows for many alliances.” 

    Guadeloupe and Pitts went on to discuss the particular liminal and exciting nature of port cities. Guadeloupe, who was in the process of finishing his work on Rotterdam and its unique cultural composition from an anthropological perspective, connected with Pitts who after finishing his journey had moved with his family to Marseille, the place that felt more like home and more Afropean than any of the other places he visited. 

    I wanted to bed blackness into Europe
    Johny PItts
    "I'm sure you're less sure now"

    To close the programme after a round of questions from the audience, Ma Neza commanded guitarist Breeveld to evoke and ‘play’ the feeling of being lost as a child in a supermarket. For somebody aiming to evoke the feelings of a lost young boy, these memories sounded surprisingly happy and cheerful. Contradictions recurred in different ways throughout the evening. Accepting complexity and uncertainty within the hybrid notion of the Afropean remains central a central theme in the work of Pitts, which he describes as a quest, an ongoing discovery of the ‘bricolage of blackness’. In the final stage of the evening, Ma Neza aptly recognised this search. 

    Lisette Ma Neza in action at Foam during the Forum on European Culture. Photo: Zsarà Grunfeld

    “I’m sure you are less sure now. There’s a space between the places. There’s a place where people come together, a meeting place on the world wide web. It’s called Afropea. There’s dialogues and sometimes, similarities and commonalities. Young girl, did you find your mother back yet? In my head, in my head, I think to myself: maybe Marseille will make me feel like I found my mother, and perhaps I’ll be more sure then,” recites Ma Neza.
     

    Maybe Marseille will make me feel like I found my mother, and perhaps I’ll be more sure then
    Lisette Ma Neza
    "It has to go on"

    More than merely an exhibition, the collaboration between Foam, Forum and Johny Pitts proved to be a meeting ground for conversation and reflection. As a companion piece to the programme and the photos, Foam and Forum realised an in-depth conversation between the artist and the renowned emeritus professor Gloria Wekker of Utrecht University and author of White Innocence: Paradoxes of Colonialism and Race. Surrounded by Pitts’ photos, the two had an engaging conversation on how Pitts’ work subverts dominant photographic modes of portraying black people, how the work situates black Europeans not only within postcolonial failures of the past but also concerning the failure of the promised future of multiculturalism, among a variety of topics. Wekker and Pitts also speculate on the future of Afropean as a project, as Wekker suggests documenting the lives of black Europeans in rural contexts too. Johny concurs, and similar to the way he describes the design of his exhibition - an indefinite, and perhaps incoherent bricolage of blackness - he states without any regret: “It’s a journey that doesn’t’ necessarily conclude, I think,” to which Gloria replies: “It has to go on.” 

    Galerie Mercatorplein

    Even though the exhibition at Foam has now come to an end, a selection of his photos can still be seen outdoors, on the Mercatorplein in Amsterdam-West. There, a unique edition of Foam’s Galerie Mercatorplein is on view until December 10.

    Every year, Foam sets up a collaboration with the city and Stadsdeel West to produce a spin-off project in public space, called Gallerie Mercatorplein. Foam has been collaborating with the (Nieuw-)West district for years and shows exhibitions in the public space on Mercatorplein. By setting up the outdoor photo gallery, Foam contributes to the goal of the Amsterdam-West district to make Mercatorplein a living room for De Baarsjes. For this edition of Galerie Mercatorplein, specifically, Foam worked together with the Nieuw Amsterdam Academy. Youngsters from New West made a selection from the work of Johny Pitts. Through the QR codes that accompany the large photos, you can listen to the reasons behind their curatorial choices.

    The outdoor exhibition at Mercatorplein, Amsterdam, is on view until December 10. Photo: Simon de Leeuw

    A selection of Pitts' photos appeared in the book Afropean: Notes From Black Europe published by Penguin in 2019 for which Pitts was recently awarded the Jhalak Prize. Pitts is also the founder of online platform Afropean.com.

    Organization: 
    FOAM
    Forum on European Culture
    De Balie
  • In the spotlight: photos by Rein Jelle Terpstra on display in the Hamburger Kunsthalle

    Theodore Jack in Levittown, Pennsylvania

    Photo: Courtesy of David Jack
     
    Photo: Courtesy of David Jack

    In the spotlight: photos by Rein Jelle Terpstra on display in the Hamburger Kunsthalle

    Rein Jelle Terpstra's work is shown as part of the group exhibition 'Mourning: On Loss and Change' at Hamburger Kunsthalle from 7 February until 14 June 2020.
    20 February 2020

    The photo series Robert F Kennedy Funeral Train: The People’s View by Dutch artist Rein Jelle Terpstra is shown as part of the group exhibition 'Mourning: On Loss and Change' at the Hamburger Kunsthalle in Germany. This exhibition represents some 30 international artists from 15 countries who engage with the theme of loss in their work. Terpstra's photo series notably fits the theme, since it recounts the day that the coffin of assassinated presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy was transported on a funeral train from New York City to Washington, D.C. Terpstra collected photographs and home movies by the mourners who lined the railway tracks to pay their final respects in 1968. The photo series has been shown in various parts of the world, including France, Spain and the United States.

    William F. Wisnom Sr. in Tullytown, Pennsylvania. Courtesy of Leslie Wisnom
    About Rein Jelle Terpstra

    Rein Jelle Terpstra studied two years at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam. He investigates the relationships between perception, memory and photography. He teaches fine arts and photography at the Hanze University, Minerva Art Academy, Groningen. In 2017, Terpstra undertook a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship in Washington, D.C. His work is held in the collection of the SFMOMA (San Francisco), MoMA Library (New York), EYE Film Museum (Amsterdam), Nederlands Fotomuseum (Rotterdam), and the Getty Research Institute (Los Angeles).

    Exhibitions of this photo series abroad

    7 February 2020—14 June 2020: Mourning, On Loss and Change (with Bas Jan Ader, Christian Boltanski, Andy Warhol a.o.) at the Hamburger Kunsthalle. Curator: Brigitte Köller

    17 January 2020—15 March 2020: Geografías del viage (with Francis Alÿs, Adrian Paci, Christina de Middel a.o.) at Visiona, Huesca, Spain. Curator: Pedro Vicente

    17 March 2018—23 September 2018: The Train: RFK's Last Journey (with Paul Fusco and Philippe Parreno) at SFMOMA, Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco. Curator: Clement Cheroux

    2 July 2018—23 September 2018: The Train: RFK's Last Journey (with Paul Fusco and Philippe Parreno) at Les Rencontres d'Arles, Arles, France. Curator: Clement Cheroux

    23 May 2018—2 September 2018: RFK Funeral Train: The People’s View at ICP, International Center of Photography, New York City. Curator: Erin Barnett

    In the spotlight

    Are you a Dutch or Netherlands-based artist performing abroad in the (near) future and would you like to be in the spotlight? Send us an email with detailed information and two horizontal high res images. The editing team will make a selection and get back to you.

    Check out the complete overview of Dutch cultural activities in Germany in our database.

    If you are a cultural professional who wants to go to Germany, feel free to contact our Germany advisor Renske Ebbers.

    Organization: 
    Kunsthalle Hamburg
  • In the spotlight: 'I BELIEVE I AM GAY' by Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit

    'I BELIEVE I AM GAY'

    Photo: Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit
     
    Photo: Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit

    In the spotlight: 'I BELIEVE I AM GAY' by Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit

    'I BELIEVE I AM GAY' is a portrait series of religious LGBTIQ individuals living in the Netherlands, now on view at poşe open space in Istanbul, Turkey.
    5 December 2019

    In the 16th century, what is now called 'the Netherlands' declared freedom of religion for all its citizens. The Netherlands has always been one of the most progressive countries in the world concerning LGBTIQ rights, and in 2001 became the first country to legalise same-sex marriage. Does this Dutch spirit of openness and tolerance allow today’s religious LGBTIQ individuals the freedom to live in peace with their identity within the restrictions and conventions of their religion?

    This question was the starting point of a one and a half year journey for photography duo Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit, during which they portrayed LGBTIQ Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus alike. The subjects also include various community leaders, such as a rabbi and reverends. All the portraits were taken at their studio in Amsterdam, spanning the years 2013-2015. The series is composed of 37 portraits; 18 portraits are exhibited at poşe open space in Istanbul, Turkey.

    Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit is a photography duo based in Amsterdam. They have been exclusively working together since 2013, following long solo careers as photographers/artists. The duo uses their practice to examine socially engaged contemporary issues and the place of the individual’s identity within modern society. A great deal of their portrait series focus on highlighting the visibility of the LGBTIQ community and LGBTIQ individuals within nowadays’ social structure. The works emphasize the fundamental position LGBTIQs take in all aspects of this social structure, whilst referring to the main influential pillars constructing it. The duo dedicates themselves to long research periods for a better understanding of their subject matters which result in series composed of large scale staged portraits.

    'I BELIEVE I AM GAY'. Photo: Hadas Itzkovitch & Anya van Lit

    Hadas Itzkovitch (1977) studied photography at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague. Anya van Lit (1968) studied photography at St Joost Academy of Art in Breda. The duo’s works have been widely exhibited and published both nationally and internationally and they received numerous grants for their realization of their projects. Itzkovitch and van Lit are the recipients of the 'Free Press Unlimited Best Report Award 2019.'

    When and where to see 'I BELIEVE I AM GAY'?

    7 December 2019 – 19 January 2020 at poşe open space in Istanbul, Turkey (Thursdays through Sundays, 13:00–19:00)

    In the spotlight

    Are you a Dutch or Netherlands-based artist performing abroad in the (near) future and would you like to be in the spotlight? Send us an email with detailed information and two horizontal high res images. The editing team will make a selection and get back to you.

    Check out the complete overview of Dutch cultural activities in Turkey in our database.

    If you are a cultural professional who wants to go to Turkey, feel free to contact our Turkey advisor Yasemin Bagci.

    I BELIEVE I AM GAY is kindly supported by the Consulate General of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Turkey and the City of Amsterdam.

    Organization: 
    Consulate General of the Netherlands in Istanbul
  • Zilveren Camera award for photo series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta'

    One of the photos of the awarded series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta' (Zilveren Camera 2018). Copyright: Cynthia Boll

    Photo: Cynthia Boll
     
    Photo: Cynthia Boll

    Zilveren Camera award for photo series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta'

    Photographer Cynthia Boll wins the Zilveren Camera award for her series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta', a follow up of the project 'The People Behind The Seawall'
    31 January 2019
    By Lonneke Bär

     

    Dutch photographer Cynthia Boll has won the Dutch photography award Zilveren Camera 2018 in the category Documentary International for her photo series Sinking Cities, Jakarta. The series is a direct result of her photo project The People Behind The Seawall, that DutchCulture helped produce.

    If precautions are not taken, one-third of Jakarta will be flooded in approximately 25 years’ time. On average the Indonesian capital is sinking by some 7.5 centimetres per year, while sea levels continue to rise and precipitation continues to increase. Over 20 million people are living in a city at risk. The People Behind the Seawall was Boll’s project to record the sinking city. DutchCulture supported it by means of the Shared Cultural Heritage Matching Fund and the winning photo series is a direct result of this project.

    The award ceremony for the Zilveren Camera will take place on 1 februari 2019. Sinking Cities, Jakarta is also nominated for the audience award.  

    Image: Cynthia Boll

  • Suriname: Moengo youngsters document their daily lives and heritage through photography

    (c) Roosje Verschoor
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Suriname: Moengo youngsters document their daily lives and heritage through photography

    18 October 2018
    The ‘Double Heritage’ project aims to depict public life in Moengo, which in addition to the culture of its inhabitants is partly determined by its colonial buildings and spaces.

    Collecting the past
    In this project, youngsters in Moengo will make a series of photos about their daily lives, which will result in exhibitions and a book, to be published in Suriname. These past weeks, photographer and initiator Roosje Verschoor researched the construction of the town of Moengo in the National Archives to find interesting stories: ‘Finding the right archives isn’t that easy. I often had to browse through the archives of a complete year. Eventually I found the most information in historical reports about the mining industry in Suriname. This sometimes included uncomfortable descriptions of the different races of the miners.’ Furthermore, Verschoor interviewed former inhabitants who shared their personal experiences concerning the town’s history of segregation.

    Documenting the present
    The workshops with the youngsters will start in a few weeks. Verschoor decided to begin with a workshop on cultural heritage, in order to discuss exactly what that entails and what it means for each of the participants. After that, they will start their own photography work, which will be partly based on specific exercises, but will also include a lot of free photography. Verschoor: ‘With free photography, I’ve noticed that young people surprise you the most with their talents.’ Interviews with these young inhabitants are also part of the project. The exhibitions and book are scheduled to be realized by the end of 2018.

    This project is supported by DutchCulture’s Shared Cultural Heritage Matching Fund.

  • Ren Hang (1987-2017) exemplary for young generation Chinese artists

    Main Image Ren Hang exhibition at Foam 3h, courtesy Stieglitz 19, Antwerp
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Ren Hang (1987-2017) exemplary for young generation Chinese artists

    The solo exhibition Naked/Nude by photographer Ren Hang who suddenly passed away last week is on view until 12 March 2017 at Amsterdam's Foam.
    1 March 2017

    Last weekend the news of Ren Hang's sudden death saddened art lovers across the world. Ren Hang, an outstanding young talent in China's contemporary photography, took his own life at an early age of 29.  Ren' solo exhibition Naked/Nude is still ongoing at Amsterdam's Foam, until 12 March 2017.

    Forbidden nudity
    As a self-taught photographer, Ren was known for his explicit images of nude, youthful bodies. They are frequently drapped in absurd compositions and decorated with colorful accessories, such as palm tree leaves, peacock heads or goldfishes. Although controversial and sometimes rather provocative - especially to his home country China, where public nudity is forbidden, even in artistic expressions - Ren's photographic works are highly recognizable with a peculiar and unworldly sense of poetry. His daring work also made him a representative of the younger generation of Chinese artists, who tend to seek more freedom of self-expression. 

    Young Chinese artists
    In the past years, Ren's work has been shown in various exhibitions and magazines in China and the rest of the world. His frequent Weibo (the Chinese Twitter) and Instagram posts easily collected thousands of like's. Ren Hang is also familiar to Dutch audiences. His photographs were exhibited in the group exhibition FUCK OFF 2 in the Groninger Museum in 2013, co-curated by Feng Boyi and the artist-activist Ai Weiwei. In 2016 Ren Hang was selected by the Outset | Unseen Exhibition Fund during the Unseen Photo Fair. The Foam exhibition Naked/Nude followed as a result.

    Ren Hang was one of the young Chinese artists who have been introduced to Dutch museums and art institutions in recent years. Two months ago the group exhibition Poets of Beijing was successfully shown in Maastricht. The exhibition Forbidden Porcelain at Museum Prinsenhof Delft, which will be opened by queen Máxima in April, will also diplay work by three young Chinese artists together with Dutch peers. 

     

    Organization: 
    FOAM
  • Vader en zoon in Kota Tua, Jakarta. De foto maakt deel uit van de serie Heritage in Transition van Isabelle Boon

    Photo: Isabelle Boon
     
    Photo: Isabelle Boon

    Indonesia: Heritage in Transition exhibition

    On 19 November 'Heritage in Transition’, an exhibition about the people living in the historical inner city of Jakarta, opens in Kota Tua.

    'Heritage in Transition' can be visited at Gedung Tjipta Niaga in Jalan Kalibesar III in Kota Tua, Jakarta and tells the story of the area’s revitalisation from a social perspective. In addition to the exhibition there will be a book of photos that also covers Semarang, where similar developments are taking place.

    Isabelle Boon is a photographer from Rotterdam. Her specific interest is the small details of everyday life. How people make a living, run a home, spend their days off – all of these daily activities tell a lot about people and their social (and sometimes historical) context. She studied photography in Utrecht. Her previous exhibitions include the World Expo Milan in 2015. 

    Find more information about the photographer here. The 'Heritage in Transition' project recieved a financial contribution from the Shared Cultural Heritage Matching Fund. 

  • ‘How to act as a curator in difficult times?’

    Gabriel Lester, MurMure, 2014. Courtesy of Leo Xu Projects, Shanghai
     
    Click to see photo caption

    ‘How to act as a curator in difficult times?’

    Bart de Baere on curating the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art in an interview with art critic and writer Sam Steverlynck.
    11 November 2015

    From22 September to 1 October 2015 the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art took place in Moscow. Under challenging circumstances, the Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art opted for a radical format and changed its structure: the biennale was condensed into ten days. Artistic, discursive and reflective moments shaped the space. The Moscow Biennale evolved as a think tank in real time.

    Now curator of the biennale Bart de Baere (Director of M HKA, Antwerp) elaborates upon his experiences in an interview with art critic and writer Sam Steverlynck. The interview ‘How to act as a curator in difficult times?’ Bart De Baere on the genesis and challenges leading up to the 6th Moscow Biennale’ talks openly about the concept, the attempts, challenges and solutions, the notions of Eurasia in East and West, the ephemeral and real results and the after care of the special 6th edition of the Moscow Biennale.

    Dutch presence at the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art

    The Dutch art scene was well represented in the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art ‘How to gather? Acting in a Center in a City in the Heart of the Island of Eurasia’. Defne Ayas (director of Witte de With Center of Contemporary Art, Rotterdam) was involved as co-curator of the biennale. Artists Rana Hamadeh (born in Lebanon, based in the Netherlands), Gabriel Lester, Suchan Kinoshita, Katja Novitskova (born in Tallin, based in Amsterdam) and Otto Snoek were involved in the main programme, as well as Dutch-American sociologist Saskia Sassen and architect Rem Koolhaas. In the parallel programme TodaysArt Festival presented the exhibition ‘Seeing Sound’, Wieske Wester was part of the group-exhibition ‘…And It Doesn’t Matter if the Phone Rings: the HISK Show-2015’ and Iwan Baan was presented in ‘Nadezhda / Hope. Russian Industrial Cities Artistically Explored’.

    More information

    For the full interview with Bart de Baere, please go to the website of the Flanders Art Institute.

    Organization: 
    Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art
  • 7 April 2015 to 15 April 2015

    Working visit India

    Lennep Media is an initiative of Van Lennep Producties with offices in Mumbai and New Delhi. Lennep Kids’ Film Fest (LKFF) is organised by Lennep Media and Mumbai International Film Festival (MIFF) in association with Cinekid, Amsterdam and the Consulate of The Netherlands, Mumbai. The first edition took place in 2014 and included a film making workshop at Utpal Shanghvi School.

    Photo: Lennep Media
     
    Photo: Lennep Media

    Working visit India

    At the invitation of the Netherlands Embassy in New Delhi, DutchCulture is visiting India.
    7 April 2015 to 15 April 2015

    The members of the delegation are Mr Cees de Graaff (Director) and Mrs Anouk Fienieg (Programme Director Heritage).

    Under the leadership of the new Prime Minister Modi, India is developing a political course that explicitly targets the youth in society. India has more than 50% of its population below the age of 25 and more than 65% below the age of 35. We are talking about 500 million young people aged 15 to 25 years, across the country.

    This development follows the themes and sectors where Dutch creative companies and organizations in India - is still relatively small in number - well known for: film, photography. jazz music and applied or serious gaming.

    The working visit will contribute to the further development of future-proof partnerships between the Dutch and Indian creative sector. The program includes meetings with representatives of various cultural enterprises in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata.
     

    Organization: 
    DutchCulture
    Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in New Delhi
    Discipline: 
    Heritage
    Audiovisual Media
    Photography
    Jazz & Improvised Music
    Video Game
    Design


  • Beautiful Distress organizes art manifestations about mental illness to visualize mental suffering in an attempt to break taboos.

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  • Report: Afropean at the Forum on European Culture

    Near the Patrice Lumumba University, Moscow.

    Photo: Johny Pitts
     
    Photo: Johny Pitts

    Report: Afropean at the Forum on European Culture

    November 1 marked the end of the exhibition 'Afropean', one of the Forum’s many successful projects. We look back at the highlights of this collaboration.
    3 November 2020

    The photo exhibition, masterfully curated by photographer Johny Pitts and Foam curator Kim Knoppers, officially opened on September 17. A day later, as an official programme part of the Forum on European Culture, the audience enjoyed a fresh look at Pitts’ photos just before finding their seats for a compelling and entertaining evening. It was inspiring and insightful discussion of Johny’s writing and his photography, moderated by de Balie’s programme editor Rokhaya Seck. Along with Johny and the moderator, speakers Francio Guadeloupe, Lisette Ma Neza and guitarist Orville Breeveld all related in their unique ways to the artist’s search for the Afropean identity. You can watch the programme below.

    Riffs

    The evening started with an almost instantaneous musical connection. Riffing off the main musical theme of Johny’s short film Afropean Express, Orville Breeveld played as if he had accompanied him for years; it made the delivery of Johny’s slam poem The Afropean Express an immediate success. Warm applause followed from the small audience gathered in the exhibition space at Foam.

    After this, multi-talented Pitts (who writes, photographs, makes film and plays music) expanded upon the early beginnings of the project, answering to the questions from moderator Rokhaya Seck. Young slam poetry performer Lisette Ma Neza, seated in the first row, scribbled along furiously and then delivered an inspired spoken word intervention that served simultaneously as punctuation and summary of the discussion, accompanied by Breeveld on guitar. She went on to perform her intimate and harrowing song I can’t breathe written in the wake of the murder of George Floyd. The combination of the words with an upbeat guitar pattern was at times eerie and uncomfortable but beautifully executed. 

    Author and photographer Johny PItts in action at Foam during the Forum on European Culture. Photo: Zsarà Grunfeld
    "Whole and unhyphenated" or "the dash as a bridge"

    The talk that followed between UvA anthropologist Francio Guadeloupe and Pitts focused on the question of the hyphen or the dash, zooming in on the denominative aspect of Johny’s quest and what a label can represent. Why would you spell Afropean as one word, and not use a word like Afro-European? Pitts: “I’d like to come up with a way of viewing the world that was whole and unhyphenated. I didn’t want to be half this half that, and Afropean could be a portal to it. I wanted to bed blackness into Europe. It’s a sort of a futuristic word that helps to piece the jigsaw together.” Guadeloupe: “the dash between a word like Afro-Caribbean is important. The dash is also a bridge and allows for many alliances.” 

    Guadeloupe and Pitts went on to discuss the particular liminal and exciting nature of port cities. Guadeloupe, who was in the process of finishing his work on Rotterdam and its unique cultural composition from an anthropological perspective, connected with Pitts who after finishing his journey had moved with his family to Marseille, the place that felt more like home and more Afropean than any of the other places he visited. 

    I wanted to bed blackness into Europe
    Johny PItts
    "I'm sure you're less sure now"

    To close the programme after a round of questions from the audience, Ma Neza commanded guitarist Breeveld to evoke and ‘play’ the feeling of being lost as a child in a supermarket. For somebody aiming to evoke the feelings of a lost young boy, these memories sounded surprisingly happy and cheerful. Contradictions recurred in different ways throughout the evening. Accepting complexity and uncertainty within the hybrid notion of the Afropean remains central a central theme in the work of Pitts, which he describes as a quest, an ongoing discovery of the ‘bricolage of blackness’. In the final stage of the evening, Ma Neza aptly recognised this search. 

    Lisette Ma Neza in action at Foam during the Forum on European Culture. Photo: Zsarà Grunfeld

    “I’m sure you are less sure now. There’s a space between the places. There’s a place where people come together, a meeting place on the world wide web. It’s called Afropea. There’s dialogues and sometimes, similarities and commonalities. Young girl, did you find your mother back yet? In my head, in my head, I think to myself: maybe Marseille will make me feel like I found my mother, and perhaps I’ll be more sure then,” recites Ma Neza.
     

    Maybe Marseille will make me feel like I found my mother, and perhaps I’ll be more sure then
    Lisette Ma Neza
    "It has to go on"

    More than merely an exhibition, the collaboration between Foam, Forum and Johny Pitts proved to be a meeting ground for conversation and reflection. As a companion piece to the programme and the photos, Foam and Forum realised an in-depth conversation between the artist and the renowned emeritus professor Gloria Wekker of Utrecht University and author of White Innocence: Paradoxes of Colonialism and Race. Surrounded by Pitts’ photos, the two had an engaging conversation on how Pitts’ work subverts dominant photographic modes of portraying black people, how the work situates black Europeans not only within postcolonial failures of the past but also concerning the failure of the promised future of multiculturalism, among a variety of topics. Wekker and Pitts also speculate on the future of Afropean as a project, as Wekker suggests documenting the lives of black Europeans in rural contexts too. Johny concurs, and similar to the way he describes the design of his exhibition - an indefinite, and perhaps incoherent bricolage of blackness - he states without any regret: “It’s a journey that doesn’t’ necessarily conclude, I think,” to which Gloria replies: “It has to go on.” 

    Galerie Mercatorplein

    Even though the exhibition at Foam has now come to an end, a selection of his photos can still be seen outdoors, on the Mercatorplein in Amsterdam-West. There, a unique edition of Foam’s Galerie Mercatorplein is on view until December 10.

    Every year, Foam sets up a collaboration with the city and Stadsdeel West to produce a spin-off project in public space, called Gallerie Mercatorplein. Foam has been collaborating with the (Nieuw-)West district for years and shows exhibitions in the public space on Mercatorplein. By setting up the outdoor photo gallery, Foam contributes to the goal of the Amsterdam-West district to make Mercatorplein a living room for De Baarsjes. For this edition of Galerie Mercatorplein, specifically, Foam worked together with the Nieuw Amsterdam Academy. Youngsters from New West made a selection from the work of Johny Pitts. Through the QR codes that accompany the large photos, you can listen to the reasons behind their curatorial choices.

    The outdoor exhibition at Mercatorplein, Amsterdam, is on view until December 10. Photo: Simon de Leeuw

    A selection of Pitts' photos appeared in the book Afropean: Notes From Black Europe published by Penguin in 2019 for which Pitts was recently awarded the Jhalak Prize. Pitts is also the founder of online platform Afropean.com.

    Organization: 
    FOAM
    Forum on European Culture
    De Balie
  • In the spotlight: photos by Rein Jelle Terpstra on display in the Hamburger Kunsthalle

    Theodore Jack in Levittown, Pennsylvania

    Photo: Courtesy of David Jack
     
    Photo: Courtesy of David Jack

    In the spotlight: photos by Rein Jelle Terpstra on display in the Hamburger Kunsthalle

    Rein Jelle Terpstra's work is shown as part of the group exhibition 'Mourning: On Loss and Change' at Hamburger Kunsthalle from 7 February until 14 June 2020.
    20 February 2020

    The photo series Robert F Kennedy Funeral Train: The People’s View by Dutch artist Rein Jelle Terpstra is shown as part of the group exhibition 'Mourning: On Loss and Change' at the Hamburger Kunsthalle in Germany. This exhibition represents some 30 international artists from 15 countries who engage with the theme of loss in their work. Terpstra's photo series notably fits the theme, since it recounts the day that the coffin of assassinated presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy was transported on a funeral train from New York City to Washington, D.C. Terpstra collected photographs and home movies by the mourners who lined the railway tracks to pay their final respects in 1968. The photo series has been shown in various parts of the world, including France, Spain and the United States.

    William F. Wisnom Sr. in Tullytown, Pennsylvania. Courtesy of Leslie Wisnom
    About Rein Jelle Terpstra

    Rein Jelle Terpstra studied two years at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam. He investigates the relationships between perception, memory and photography. He teaches fine arts and photography at the Hanze University, Minerva Art Academy, Groningen. In 2017, Terpstra undertook a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship in Washington, D.C. His work is held in the collection of the SFMOMA (San Francisco), MoMA Library (New York), EYE Film Museum (Amsterdam), Nederlands Fotomuseum (Rotterdam), and the Getty Research Institute (Los Angeles).

    Exhibitions of this photo series abroad

    7 February 2020—14 June 2020: Mourning, On Loss and Change (with Bas Jan Ader, Christian Boltanski, Andy Warhol a.o.) at the Hamburger Kunsthalle. Curator: Brigitte Köller

    17 January 2020—15 March 2020: Geografías del viage (with Francis Alÿs, Adrian Paci, Christina de Middel a.o.) at Visiona, Huesca, Spain. Curator: Pedro Vicente

    17 March 2018—23 September 2018: The Train: RFK's Last Journey (with Paul Fusco and Philippe Parreno) at SFMOMA, Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco. Curator: Clement Cheroux

    2 July 2018—23 September 2018: The Train: RFK's Last Journey (with Paul Fusco and Philippe Parreno) at Les Rencontres d'Arles, Arles, France. Curator: Clement Cheroux

    23 May 2018—2 September 2018: RFK Funeral Train: The People’s View at ICP, International Center of Photography, New York City. Curator: Erin Barnett

    In the spotlight

    Are you a Dutch or Netherlands-based artist performing abroad in the (near) future and would you like to be in the spotlight? Send us an email with detailed information and two horizontal high res images. The editing team will make a selection and get back to you.

    Check out the complete overview of Dutch cultural activities in Germany in our database.

    If you are a cultural professional who wants to go to Germany, feel free to contact our Germany advisor Renske Ebbers.

    Organization: 
    Kunsthalle Hamburg
  • In the spotlight: 'I BELIEVE I AM GAY' by Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit

    'I BELIEVE I AM GAY'

    Photo: Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit
     
    Photo: Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit

    In the spotlight: 'I BELIEVE I AM GAY' by Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit

    'I BELIEVE I AM GAY' is a portrait series of religious LGBTIQ individuals living in the Netherlands, now on view at poşe open space in Istanbul, Turkey.
    5 December 2019

    In the 16th century, what is now called 'the Netherlands' declared freedom of religion for all its citizens. The Netherlands has always been one of the most progressive countries in the world concerning LGBTIQ rights, and in 2001 became the first country to legalise same-sex marriage. Does this Dutch spirit of openness and tolerance allow today’s religious LGBTIQ individuals the freedom to live in peace with their identity within the restrictions and conventions of their religion?

    This question was the starting point of a one and a half year journey for photography duo Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit, during which they portrayed LGBTIQ Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus alike. The subjects also include various community leaders, such as a rabbi and reverends. All the portraits were taken at their studio in Amsterdam, spanning the years 2013-2015. The series is composed of 37 portraits; 18 portraits are exhibited at poşe open space in Istanbul, Turkey.

    Hadas Itzkovitch and Anya van Lit is a photography duo based in Amsterdam. They have been exclusively working together since 2013, following long solo careers as photographers/artists. The duo uses their practice to examine socially engaged contemporary issues and the place of the individual’s identity within modern society. A great deal of their portrait series focus on highlighting the visibility of the LGBTIQ community and LGBTIQ individuals within nowadays’ social structure. The works emphasize the fundamental position LGBTIQs take in all aspects of this social structure, whilst referring to the main influential pillars constructing it. The duo dedicates themselves to long research periods for a better understanding of their subject matters which result in series composed of large scale staged portraits.

    'I BELIEVE I AM GAY'. Photo: Hadas Itzkovitch & Anya van Lit

    Hadas Itzkovitch (1977) studied photography at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague. Anya van Lit (1968) studied photography at St Joost Academy of Art in Breda. The duo’s works have been widely exhibited and published both nationally and internationally and they received numerous grants for their realization of their projects. Itzkovitch and van Lit are the recipients of the 'Free Press Unlimited Best Report Award 2019.'

    When and where to see 'I BELIEVE I AM GAY'?

    7 December 2019 – 19 January 2020 at poşe open space in Istanbul, Turkey (Thursdays through Sundays, 13:00–19:00)

    In the spotlight

    Are you a Dutch or Netherlands-based artist performing abroad in the (near) future and would you like to be in the spotlight? Send us an email with detailed information and two horizontal high res images. The editing team will make a selection and get back to you.

    Check out the complete overview of Dutch cultural activities in Turkey in our database.

    If you are a cultural professional who wants to go to Turkey, feel free to contact our Turkey advisor Yasemin Bagci.

    I BELIEVE I AM GAY is kindly supported by the Consulate General of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Turkey and the City of Amsterdam.

    Organization: 
    Consulate General of the Netherlands in Istanbul
  • Zilveren Camera award for photo series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta'

    One of the photos of the awarded series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta' (Zilveren Camera 2018). Copyright: Cynthia Boll

    Photo: Cynthia Boll
     
    Photo: Cynthia Boll

    Zilveren Camera award for photo series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta'

    Photographer Cynthia Boll wins the Zilveren Camera award for her series 'Sinking Cities, Jakarta', a follow up of the project 'The People Behind The Seawall'
    31 January 2019
    By Lonneke Bär

     

    Dutch photographer Cynthia Boll has won the Dutch photography award Zilveren Camera 2018 in the category Documentary International for her photo series Sinking Cities, Jakarta. The series is a direct result of her photo project The People Behind The Seawall, that DutchCulture helped produce.

    If precautions are not taken, one-third of Jakarta will be flooded in approximately 25 years’ time. On average the Indonesian capital is sinking by some 7.5 centimetres per year, while sea levels continue to rise and precipitation continues to increase. Over 20 million people are living in a city at risk. The People Behind the Seawall was Boll’s project to record the sinking city. DutchCulture supported it by means of the Shared Cultural Heritage Matching Fund and the winning photo series is a direct result of this project.

    The award ceremony for the Zilveren Camera will take place on 1 februari 2019. Sinking Cities, Jakarta is also nominated for the audience award.  

    Image: Cynthia Boll

  • Suriname: Moengo youngsters document their daily lives and heritage through photography

    (c) Roosje Verschoor
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Suriname: Moengo youngsters document their daily lives and heritage through photography

    18 October 2018
    The ‘Double Heritage’ project aims to depict public life in Moengo, which in addition to the culture of its inhabitants is partly determined by its colonial buildings and spaces.

    Collecting the past
    In this project, youngsters in Moengo will make a series of photos about their daily lives, which will result in exhibitions and a book, to be published in Suriname. These past weeks, photographer and initiator Roosje Verschoor researched the construction of the town of Moengo in the National Archives to find interesting stories: ‘Finding the right archives isn’t that easy. I often had to browse through the archives of a complete year. Eventually I found the most information in historical reports about the mining industry in Suriname. This sometimes included uncomfortable descriptions of the different races of the miners.’ Furthermore, Verschoor interviewed former inhabitants who shared their personal experiences concerning the town’s history of segregation.

    Documenting the present
    The workshops with the youngsters will start in a few weeks. Verschoor decided to begin with a workshop on cultural heritage, in order to discuss exactly what that entails and what it means for each of the participants. After that, they will start their own photography work, which will be partly based on specific exercises, but will also include a lot of free photography. Verschoor: ‘With free photography, I’ve noticed that young people surprise you the most with their talents.’ Interviews with these young inhabitants are also part of the project. The exhibitions and book are scheduled to be realized by the end of 2018.

    This project is supported by DutchCulture’s Shared Cultural Heritage Matching Fund.

  • Ren Hang (1987-2017) exemplary for young generation Chinese artists

    Main Image Ren Hang exhibition at Foam 3h, courtesy Stieglitz 19, Antwerp
     
    Click to see photo caption

    Ren Hang (1987-2017) exemplary for young generation Chinese artists

    The solo exhibition Naked/Nude by photographer Ren Hang who suddenly passed away last week is on view until 12 March 2017 at Amsterdam's Foam.
    1 March 2017

    Last weekend the news of Ren Hang's sudden death saddened art lovers across the world. Ren Hang, an outstanding young talent in China's contemporary photography, took his own life at an early age of 29.  Ren' solo exhibition Naked/Nude is still ongoing at Amsterdam's Foam, until 12 March 2017.

    Forbidden nudity
    As a self-taught photographer, Ren was known for his explicit images of nude, youthful bodies. They are frequently drapped in absurd compositions and decorated with colorful accessories, such as palm tree leaves, peacock heads or goldfishes. Although controversial and sometimes rather provocative - especially to his home country China, where public nudity is forbidden, even in artistic expressions - Ren's photographic works are highly recognizable with a peculiar and unworldly sense of poetry. His daring work also made him a representative of the younger generation of Chinese artists, who tend to seek more freedom of self-expression. 

    Young Chinese artists
    In the past years, Ren's work has been shown in various exhibitions and magazines in China and the rest of the world. His frequent Weibo (the Chinese Twitter) and Instagram posts easily collected thousands of like's. Ren Hang is also familiar to Dutch audiences. His photographs were exhibited in the group exhibition FUCK OFF 2 in the Groninger Museum in 2013, co-curated by Feng Boyi and the artist-activist Ai Weiwei. In 2016 Ren Hang was selected by the Outset | Unseen Exhibition Fund during the Unseen Photo Fair. The Foam exhibition Naked/Nude followed as a result.

    Ren Hang was one of the young Chinese artists who have been introduced to Dutch museums and art institutions in recent years. Two months ago the group exhibition Poets of Beijing was successfully shown in Maastricht. The exhibition Forbidden Porcelain at Museum Prinsenhof Delft, which will be opened by queen Máxima in April, will also diplay work by three young Chinese artists together with Dutch peers. 

     

    Organization: 
    FOAM
  • Vader en zoon in Kota Tua, Jakarta. De foto maakt deel uit van de serie Heritage in Transition van Isabelle Boon

    Photo: Isabelle Boon
     
    Photo: Isabelle Boon

    Indonesia: Heritage in Transition exhibition

    On 19 November 'Heritage in Transition’, an exhibition about the people living in the historical inner city of Jakarta, opens in Kota Tua.

    'Heritage in Transition' can be visited at Gedung Tjipta Niaga in Jalan Kalibesar III in Kota Tua, Jakarta and tells the story of the area’s revitalisation from a social perspective. In addition to the exhibition there will be a book of photos that also covers Semarang, where similar developments are taking place.

    Isabelle Boon is a photographer from Rotterdam. Her specific interest is the small details of everyday life. How people make a living, run a home, spend their days off – all of these daily activities tell a lot about people and their social (and sometimes historical) context. She studied photography in Utrecht. Her previous exhibitions include the World Expo Milan in 2015. 

    Find more information about the photographer here. The 'Heritage in Transition' project recieved a financial contribution from the Shared Cultural Heritage Matching Fund. 

  • ‘How to act as a curator in difficult times?’

    Gabriel Lester, MurMure, 2014. Courtesy of Leo Xu Projects, Shanghai
     
    Click to see photo caption

    ‘How to act as a curator in difficult times?’

    Bart de Baere on curating the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art in an interview with art critic and writer Sam Steverlynck.
    11 November 2015

    From22 September to 1 October 2015 the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art took place in Moscow. Under challenging circumstances, the Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art opted for a radical format and changed its structure: the biennale was condensed into ten days. Artistic, discursive and reflective moments shaped the space. The Moscow Biennale evolved as a think tank in real time.

    Now curator of the biennale Bart de Baere (Director of M HKA, Antwerp) elaborates upon his experiences in an interview with art critic and writer Sam Steverlynck. The interview ‘How to act as a curator in difficult times?’ Bart De Baere on the genesis and challenges leading up to the 6th Moscow Biennale’ talks openly about the concept, the attempts, challenges and solutions, the notions of Eurasia in East and West, the ephemeral and real results and the after care of the special 6th edition of the Moscow Biennale.

    Dutch presence at the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art

    The Dutch art scene was well represented in the 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art ‘How to gather? Acting in a Center in a City in the Heart of the Island of Eurasia’. Defne Ayas (director of Witte de With Center of Contemporary Art, Rotterdam) was involved as co-curator of the biennale. Artists Rana Hamadeh (born in Lebanon, based in the Netherlands), Gabriel Lester, Suchan Kinoshita, Katja Novitskova (born in Tallin, based in Amsterdam) and Otto Snoek were involved in the main programme, as well as Dutch-American sociologist Saskia Sassen and architect Rem Koolhaas. In the parallel programme TodaysArt Festival presented the exhibition ‘Seeing Sound’, Wieske Wester was part of the group-exhibition ‘…And It Doesn’t Matter if the Phone Rings: the HISK Show-2015’ and Iwan Baan was presented in ‘Nadezhda / Hope. Russian Industrial Cities Artistically Explored’.

    More information

    For the full interview with Bart de Baere, please go to the website of the Flanders Art Institute.

    Organization: 
    Moscow International Biennale of Contemporary Art
  • 7 April 2015 to 15 April 2015

    Working visit India

    Lennep Media is an initiative of Van Lennep Producties with offices in Mumbai and New Delhi. Lennep Kids’ Film Fest (LKFF) is organised by Lennep Media and Mumbai International Film Festival (MIFF) in association with Cinekid, Amsterdam and the Consulate of The Netherlands, Mumbai. The first edition took place in 2014 and included a film making workshop at Utpal Shanghvi School.

    Photo: Lennep Media
     
    Photo: Lennep Media

    Working visit India

    At the invitation of the Netherlands Embassy in New Delhi, DutchCulture is visiting India.
    7 April 2015 to 15 April 2015

    The members of the delegation are Mr Cees de Graaff (Director) and Mrs Anouk Fienieg (Programme Director Heritage).

    Under the leadership of the new Prime Minister Modi, India is developing a political course that explicitly targets the youth in society. India has more than 50% of its population below the age of 25 and more than 65% below the age of 35. We are talking about 500 million young people aged 15 to 25 years, across the country.

    This development follows the themes and sectors where Dutch creative companies and organizations in India - is still relatively small in number - well known for: film, photography. jazz music and applied or serious gaming.

    The working visit will contribute to the further development of future-proof partnerships between the Dutch and Indian creative sector. The program includes meetings with representatives of various cultural enterprises in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata.
     

    Organization: 
    DutchCulture
    Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in New Delhi
    Discipline: 
    Heritage
    Audiovisual Media
    Photography
    Jazz & Improvised Music
    Video Game
    Design


  • Beautiful Distress organizes art manifestations about mental illness to visualize mental suffering in an attempt to break taboos.

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