Showing posts with label dutch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dutch. Show all posts

29/08/25

Berend Strik @ Hopstreet Gallery, Brussels - "Threads that Echo" Exhibition - Text by Marja Bloem

Berend Strik 
Threads that Echo
Hopstreet Gallery, Brussels
4 September - 25 October 2025
Berend Strik gave this rather enigmatic title to his first exhibition at the Hopstreet Gallery, but looking at his work, the meaning becomes clear.

Upon entering the first room, visitors are immediately struck by a large, colourful piece. A Pollock? No, a Strik! In this uninvited collaboration with Pollock, Strik explains his relationship with art history, with the ‘great’ masters – his icons.

The work is composed of photographic images that have been enhanced with textile techniques including threads, appliqués and different types of stitches. This fusion of photography and textiles is a rare combination.  For Strik, who also creates drawings, ceramics and theatre, the choice of photography was based on one of its essential characteristics. “A photograph shows an image of something that once existed, but is no longer physically visible. It does not exist, yet it can be seen in a photographic image. Memories, references, descriptions, suggestions and spatial indications are all part of it.” And the textile work opens that space up. The Pollock piece is part of an ongoing project Strik has been working on for several years, entitled Deciphering the Artist’s Mind, in which he seeks to position himself in relation to art history and reflect on his role as an artist within society.

The Dutch artist Karel Appel, also one of Strik’s icons, is also featured in Deciphering the Artist’s Mind. Appel became notorious for saying “I just mess around a bit.” In reality, Strik discovered, Appel allowed the unconscious to surface, but he knew exactly what he was doing. It is precisely this kind of hidden meaning that Strik seeks to uncover or highlight. To that end, he chose to cover certain areas with velvet (what is being concealed?) and to add all manner of stitches, holes, and fabric fragments. He didn’t work on a photograph of a work by Appel but on a photo of a work that no longer exists because Appel himself painted over it. The original work was concealed under layers of paint, but was revealed through infrared light.

Strik deliberately avoids the word embroidery as he feels it steers the viewer’s thoughts in a particular direction, which is precisely what he wishes to prevent. He wants the viewer to bring their own context to the work, and in doing so, reach something more universal. For Strik, the artist’s studio is above all the place of genesis; the place where a work comes into being.

The series about mothers, presented in another room, also relates to the idea of origin. By concealing some elements and accentuating others, these works exude a subtle, intimate atmosphere that is universally recognisable. Strik aims to evoke a sense of shared memories, a feeling like ‘oh yes, my mother…’ and ‘we all have a mother’.

In Strik’s work, we can see very clearly how it was made; unlike, say, a painting where one can only guess at the suggestions. We can literally see the stitches, how a shape has been cut from fabric and sewn on, how the stitching varies from rough to precise. Sewing is an ancient technique; it’s instantly recognisable to the brain. Human brains are equipped with mirror neurons that associate results with movements: splatters with a mess, a cut with a knife. Sewing is one of those gestures, deeply rooted in our cognitive process, going back to the beginnings of humanity and the earliest human societies. The combination of these two elements, photography and sewing, has a unique effect on the brain. On the one hand, there is the photograph, which feels deeply personal precisely because of its universality. The image is then pierced by the familiar gestures of sewing. In our minds, these elements do not naturally belong together. It’s precisely this sense of the unexpected that compels the viewer to keep searching for meaning.  Strik’s art is an active event: a process of manipulation, transformation, and reinterpretation of images and materials. It plays with revelation and concealment, with the human desire to understand, and the necessity of leaving space for the unknown. Altering photographs with a needle and textiles is a form of dissection and reconstruction.

“As a photographer I capture,” Strik explains, “and as an editor of the image, I liberate it. Only then does the photograph gain value as an autonomous entity with presence in the here and now.”

Marja Bloem, Director of the Egress Foundation

Artist Berend Strik

Berend Strik (born 26 April 1960, Nijmegen) is a Dutch visual artist who lives and works in Amsterdam. He studied at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten in Amsterdam from 1985 to 1988. Between 1998 and 2000, he participated in the International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP) in New York.

Strik’s work is held in various public collections in The Netherlands, including the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam; Fries Museum, Leeuwarden; Kunstmuseum, The Hague; Museum Het Valkhof, Nijmegen; Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede; Stedelijk Museum Schiedam; Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam; Schunck Museum, Heerlen; TextielMuseum, Tilburg; and Museum De Domijnen, Sittard.

His work is also represented in numerous corporate collections, such as Stichting Kunst & Historisch Bezit; ABN AMRO; Achmea Art Collection; AkzoNobel Art Foundation; AMC Art Collection; Bouwfonds Kunstcollectie; Kunstcollectie De Nederlandsche Bank; LUMC Art Collection; Ahold Collection; BPD Art Collection; and the Rabo Art Collection.

His work is currently on display in the group exhibition ‘Things I’ve Never Seen Before’ at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. It is a selection from the donation made by gallery owner and collector Fons Welters, who donated a series of exceptional works to the museum in 2022. The exhibition runs until 19 October 2025.

HOPSTREET GALLERY BRUSSELS
Sint-Jorisstraat 109 rue Saint Georges, 1050 Brussels 

03/08/25

Rafaël Rozendaal @ MoMA, New York - "Light" An immersive Digital Artwork

Light: Rafaël Rozendaal 
MoMA, New York
Through September 1, 2025 

Rafaël Rozendaal Quadrant
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Quadrant, 2023 
Digital animation using generative algorithm
Private collection

Rafaël Rozendaal Pages
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Pages, 2023 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Variation 39: Erick and Mara Calderon Collection 

Rafaël Rozendaal Implosion
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Implosion, 2023 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Collection the artist

The Museum of Modern Art presents Light: Rafaël Rozendaal, an immersive digital artwork, on view on the Hyundai Card Digital Wall in MoMA’s Agnes Gund Garden Lobby. This is the last chance to view this installation that presents a selection of Rozendaal’s vibrant animated works, each sampled for two to three minutes. Each work originates as a storyboard sketched on paper, which is then translated into code of only a few kilobytes (the exhibition's total file size is 135 KB). The resulting final form is an autonomous website powered by that algorithm, generating the animation in real time. 

Rafaël Rozendaal Rooms
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Rooms, 2024 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Collection the artist

Rafaël Rozendaal Many Moment
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Many Moment, 2018 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Collection Family Kolen

Rafaël Rozendaal (Dutch-Brazilian, born 1980) has been an innovator in the realm of Internet-based art since the early 2000s. He produces captivating animations that explore the aesthetic and conceptual possibilities of code, treating it as if it were paint. Rafaël Rozendaal has historically planned his websites to be robust enough to withstand the evolution of both software and hardware, and to be equally vivid at any screen resolution. The artworks adapt fluidly to any display, from a smartphone to the high-resolution LED screen in MoMA’s Agnes Gund Garden Lobby—which spans nearly 25 feet across. The result is a state of immersion so complete that it seems to merge with the physical world. Because Rafaël Rozendaal has chosen the Internet as his canvas, his works exist within the browser’s flat yet multidimensional digital landscape. For the same reason, these and all his works are accessible to all online through their URLs, even though they are held in private and public collections.

Raphael Rozendaal Moma
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Photomontage of the Gund Lobby featuring Flood, 2023 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Private collection 

Raphael Rozendaal Moma
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Photomontage of the Gund Lobby featuring 
Twisting and Turning, 2021 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Collection Russell Smith

Raphael Rozendaal Moma
Rafaël Rozendaal 
Photomontage of the Gund Lobby featuring Pages, 2023 
Digital animation using generative algorithm 
Variation 39: Erick and Mara Calderon Collection
“I imagine we will live in a world where there is no difference between a screen and any other surface,” said Rafaël Rozendaal. “I always wanted to make work that could be seen by anyone, anywhere, anytime. I wanted to create work that gives the viewer a feeling of possibility.”

“Rafaël’s digital artworks are lean, accessible, indestructible. They bend and adapt and never break. They are the ultimate example of the power that comes from lightness” says Paola Antonelli.
Light: Rafaël Rozendaal is organized by Paola Antonelli, Senior Curator, Department of Architecture and Design, and Director, Research and Development, and Amanda Forment, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Architecture and Design.

The Hyundai Card Digital Wall is a space for digital works and emerging technologies by contemporary artists.

MoMA - The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53 Street, New York City

24/06/25

Master I.S. – The Enigmatic Contemporary of Rembrandt @ Serlachius Museum, Mänttä

Master I.S. – The Enigmatic Contemporary of Rembrandt
Serlachius Museum, Mänttä 
Through 17 August 2025

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Portrait of an Old Woman, 1651
Oil on panel, 41 x 33 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wienna
Photo: © KHMMuseumsverband

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Young Scholar Half-naked, 1638
Oil on panel, 54 x 40 cm 
Private collection 
Photo: David Bassenge

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Old Woman Reading a Letter, 1658
Oil on panel, 50 x 35 cm 
Nationalmuseum Stockholm
Photo: Nationalmuseum, Anna Danielsson

Who was the mysterious artist who signed their works in the 17th century with the monogram I.S.? The research project and exion, hibition by Serlachius and the Dutch Museum De Lakenhal present, for the first time, the works of this contemporary of Rembrandt. 

The artist who signed their works with the monogram I.S. is believed to have resided in the city of Leiden in the Netherlands during the 1620s and 1630s. Their works show significant influences from renowned Dutch artists Jan Lievens and Rembrandt, who lived and worked in the city c. 1625–1630/31.

Jan Lievens
Jan Lievens 
Old Man, c. 1625/1626 
Oil on panel, 53,5 x 47,2 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum Wienna 
Photo: © KHMMuseumsverband

Gerrit Dou
Gerrit Dou
Self-portrait of the Painter in His Studio, c. 1632 
Oil on panel, 60,5 x 44 cm 
Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden, 
Purchased with the support of the 
Vereniging van Belangstellenden in Museum De Lakenhal, 
support from the Vereniging Rembrandt 
and a private donation 
Photo: Museum De Lakenhal

The new research project has explored the artist’s works and identity more extensively than ever before. The research began with the Serlachius Seminar held in spring 2022, the topics of which included the Fine Arts Foundation’s old European art.

With the international research project, c. 25 paintings have been identified that are known or believed to be created by Master I.S. Some of the works have disappeared and are known only from black-and-white photographs. The exhibition is the first in which a significant part of the artist’s work has been gathered in one place. After Serlachius, the exhibition will continue in October at Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden.

The Serlachius exhibition includes eighteen paintings from various collections across Europe and from Canada. Fourteen of these are attributed to Master I.S. Additionally, the exhibition features four other paintings that provide a basis for comparison of the works. These works are by Jan Lievens, Gerrit Dou, and David Bailly.

The exhibition is curated by Tomi Moisio, Curator at Serlachius Museums. The Leiden exhibition is curated by Janneke van Asperen, Curator of Old Masters at Museum De Lakenhal.

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
 
Old Man with a Fur Hat, 1640s 
Oil on canvas, 42 x 35,5 cm 
Gösta Serlachius Fine Arts Foundation. 
Photo: The Finnish National Gallery, Yehia Eweis

Master I.S.
Master I.S.
Old Woman in Three-Quarter Profile, 1640–1645 
Oil on panel, 47 x 38 cm
Private collection 
Photo: Eva Steentjes

The artist’s identity remains a mystery

The Serlachius collection includes a work purchased from London in 1937, Old Man in a Fur Hat (1640s), previously attributed to Jan Lievens (1607–1674). The research project has strengthened the notion that the creator might be Master I.S.

The artist often depicts elderly people in great detail and without embellishment. The models are characterised by a melancholic, sideways gaze. Their works feature costumes, details, and interiors that suggest Eastern European or Scandinavian origins.

“Perhaps they are from that region and came to study in Leiden, for example. Alternatively, they may have travelled in Eastern or Northern Europe”, says Tomi Moisio.

So far, the identity of the artist who signed their works with the pseudonym I.S. has not been discovered. Research continues, and the interest of international art historians has brought new information about their works. At the same time, their value has increased.

The exhibition is accompanied by a publication in which experts in the field explore the mystery of Master I.S. and make comparative research on artist-contemporaries. The articles in the book have been written by curators Tomi Moisio and Janneke van Asperen, as well as the distinguished specialists on old Dutch and Flemish art, professors Volker Manuth and Marieke de Winkel. 

The research group has also included David de Witt, the Chief Curator at Rembrandthuis in Amsterdam. The book is published in English, as it is expected to be of great interest to the international academic community.

SERLACHIUS MUSEUM
Serlachius Manor, Joenniementie 47, Mäntä

Master I.S. – The Enigmatic Contemporary of Rembrandt
Serlachius Museum, Mänttä, Finland, 12 April - 17 August 2025

23/02/25

melanie bonajo, When the body says Yes @ Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen Collection

Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen acquires melanie bonajo’s When the body says Yes

melanie bonajo
, When the body says Yes
© melanie bonajo / Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen receives When the body says Yes in its museum collection. The installation, created by Dutch artist melanie bonajo,  was exhibited during the summer of 2024 during the much talked about event Craving for Boijmans. There it functioned as a sensory end piece for a special art route through the closed museum building. In 2022, When the body says Yes was the Dutch entry for the 59th Venice Biennale.

When the body says Yes
This art piece by melanie bonajo is an installation consisting of a video artwork that is 43 minutes in length, framed by an organically-shaped scenography created in collaboration with fellow artist Théo Demans. When the body says Yes takes the viewer through and around the body, addressing the role of sexuality, body positivity, gender and consent within our society. There’s a very diverse group of people featured in the film, which challenges the viewer with a multitude of questions: on sexuality, the body and a personal vision on gender beyond the stereotypical patterns.

Craving for Boijmans
When the body says Yes was a prime attraction during Craving for Boijmans. It became an inspiring challenge and collaboration between the museum, the artists and the gallery to land the piece at the majestic Bodonzaal. It injected a humanity into what was an abandoned building. Not just thanks to the expressive, inclusive design, but most of all the topics that were addressed. When the body says Yes builds a bridge between the human who experiences it and the individuals who appear inside of it. Visitors have reacted in a positive way – often surprised or provoked – which speaks to the continuous social relevance of the subjects melanie bonajo addresses in their work.

melanie bonajo is an artist, filmmaker, sexological bodyworker, somatic sex coach and educator, cuddle workshop leader and activist. Through videos, performances, photographs and installations, bonajo explores current issues arising from living together in a capitalist system. melanie bonajo is represented by AKINCI.

MUSEUM BOIJMANS VAN BEUNINGEN
Museumpark 18-20, 3015 CX Rotterdam

08/02/25

Happy Birthday Amsterdam Exhibition @ H’ART Museum, Amsterdam - As part of the Amsterdam 750 anniversary celebrations

Happy Birthday Amsterdam
H’ART Museum, Amsterdam
Through 16 March 2025


Eva Besnyö
Sumatrakade, 1933-39. 
Collection City Archives Amsterdam 
© Eva Besnyö/MAI

Violette Cornelius
Youths on Amstelveld, 1962
Collection City Archives Amsterdam
© Violette Cornelius /
National Museum of Photography

Armando Cairo
School Playground, 1970-79
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherland

Willem Witsen
The Stock Exchange Gate from Rokin, 1880-1923 
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands 
Photo by Margareta Svensson

Erwin Olaf
Drag disco/costume party La Night aux Folles 
in discotheek Flora Palace, 1983 
Collection City Archives Amsterdam 
© Erwin Olaf

As part of the Amsterdam 750 anniversary celebrations, H’ART Museum presents a unique exhibition focusing on 75 highly diverse artists who have contributed to the colourful image of the city in the past and present. Subjects range from Johan Cruyff seen through the eyes of Marlene Dumas (b. 1953) to 1990s Amsterdam viewed through the lens of Erwin Olaf (1959-2023). Happy Birthday Amsterdam presents a colourful and richly varied parade of images celebrating Amsterdam as a city of art. The museum has chosen an unusually free arrangement, without any chronology and art historical categories, to reflect the unconventional nature of the city. Each of the 75 prominent artists featured in the exhibition has made a distinctive contribution to the artistic and public image of the city today. The selection of works on show constitutes the museum’s tribute to the city, its people, its various neighbourhoods, and the artists who have lived, worked or spent time there over the past few centuries.

Herman Gordijn
Lida with Spotted Tram, 1975
Collection Joseph Kessels

Aldo van Nieuwelaar
Amsterdammer KR 237, 1978-79
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

Paul Huf
Cleaning the streets on Prinseneiland,1962 
Collection City Archives Amsterdam 
© Paul Huf/MAI

Jan Sierhuis 
Amstelkade, Amsterdam, 1951
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

George Hendrik Breitner
Dam 2, 1896-97 
Collection City Archives Amsterdam

The exhibition is the result of a close partnership between H’ART Museum and the Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed (English: Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands) or RCE, its main source of loan items for Happy Birthday Amsterdam. The more than 100,000 objects in the stewardship of the RCE form one of the largest art collections in the Netherlands. The vast majority of this ‘national collection’ are kept at the CollectieCentrum Nederland (CCNL), together with the collections of the Nederlands Openluchtmuseum, Paleis Het Loo, and the Rijksmuseum. CCNL houses over half a million objects and is sometimes called the ‘physical memory’ of the Netherlands.  

Willem Witsen
Peat Ships on the IJ, 1880-1923
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

Willem Witsen
The Montelbaans Tower, unfinished, 1880-1920
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

Marja Samsom
Sardine-Box 1, 1973-76
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

Guillaume Lo A Njoe 
The liberation of the mushroom, 1975-81
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands 
Photo by Magareta Svensson

C.A. Wertheim 
Self-Portrait (after a 1629 self-portrait by Rembrandt), 1989 
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands 
Photo by Wendy Oakes

Jennifer Tee
Tampan Womb of Time, 2016 
Leiden University Medical Centre 
(LUMC) Art Collection
Photo by Gert Jan van Rooij

Happy Birthday Amsterdam is the first exhibition to include over 50 RCE loans relating to the city of Amsterdam. So many locally relevant items from the national collection have rarely been exhibited together in the Dutch capital. They are supplemented by outstanding works from other sources, such as the Amsterdam City Archives, the ABN AMRO Art Collection, De Nieuwe Kerk Amsterdam, and private collections.  

Natasja Kensmil
Anton de Kom memorial plaque, 2021
De Nieuwe Kerk Amsterdam.
© Natasja Kensmil

Marlene Dumas
Johan Cruijff (double portrait), 1997 
Lithograph (edition 7/50) 
ABN AMRO Collection. 
Photo by Tom Haartsen, Ouderkerk aan de Amstel

Barbara Broekman
The Golden Thread, 2023
Courtesy of the artist
Photo by Gert Jan van Rooy

Leo Gestel
Untitled, 1937
Collection Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands

The works on show are typical of Amsterdam: colourful, diverse and forthright. They are both surprising and familiar to art lovers and fans of the city. The public is treated to works by a multitude of big names from the world of art: from Ferdinand Bol (1616-1680), Jacob Olie (1834-1905), Willem Witsen (1860-1923), Piet Mondriaan (1872-1944), Karel Appel (1921-2006) and Paul Huf (1924-2002) to Ed van der Elsken (1925-1990), Herman Gordijn (1932-2017), Jeroen Henneman (b. 1942), Marina Abramović (b. 1946) and Natasja Kensmil (b. 1973). The selection ranges from paintings and photographs to sound works, sculptures, and iconic examples of street scenes, textiles and Amsterdam design. 

H'ART MUSEUM, AMSTERDAM
Amstel 51, 1018EJ Amsterdam

Happy Birthday Amsterdam - H’ART Museum 
4 December 2024 - 16 March 2025

16/11/24

Marianne Kemp @ Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole - "Essentially Unbound" Exhibition

Marianne Kemp: Essentially Unbound 
Maya Frodeman Gallery, Jackson Hole
20 September - 1 December 2024

MARIANNE KEMP
Dew, 2024
Horsehair, cotton and pins, 59 x 78 3/4 x 1 5/8 inches
© Marianne Kemp, courtesy Maya Frodeman Gallery

MARIANNE KEMP
Late and Soon, 2024
Horsehair, cotton, wood, canvas, and acrylic paint 
39 3/8 x 51 1/8 x 4 inches
© Marianne Kemp, courtesy Maya Frodeman Gallery

MARIANNE KEMP
Electric Move, 2022 
Horsehair, cotton and pins, 23 5/8 x 9 7/8 x 3 1/8 inches
© Marianne Kemp, courtesy Maya Frodeman Gallery

Maya Frodeman Gallery presents Essentially Unbound, a solo exhibition with Dutch artist MARIANNE KEMP.

Essentially Unbound, Marianne Kemp’s second solo exhibition with Maya Frodeman Gallery, finds the artist further exploring the technical intricacies of her unique chosen craft: woven horsehair. Using horsehair with varying combinations of other materials like raw plant fibers, and, most recently Korean Hanji paper and gold lurex, Kemp works with meticulous precision to create otherworldly forms that seem to organically morph, yet remain abstracted and enigmatic. The horsehair, the warp and the loom are the three fundamental elements of her practice, the starting points, and the primary and necessary tools. In weaving, a warp is a set of long, lengthwise fibers that run vertically up and down a textile, stretched in place on a loom before the weaving process begins; the weft is what is woven into the warp to create textiles, and where Kemp’s creativity takes flight. “I am a weaver because I am using a loom, and an artist, because what I do with the loom system,” Marianne Kemp says.

Marianne Kemp uses both traditional and nonconventional weaving techniques to create her three-dimensional environments through her unique practice of molding, knotting, curling and looping the sculptural horsehair fibers. Through properties unique to horsehair and other, largely organic materials, her woven works can appear shiny and smooth, organic and wild, or flexible and stiff. “Horsehair has its own characteristics. And for 24 years, I have wanted to show it in a different way. It keeps surprising me,” Marianne Kemp says. Her practice is very much grounded in her experimentation with technique. Works in Essentially Unbound, such as Dew (2024) and Late and Soon (2024), are united by Kemp’s exuberant use of color. This has brought joy and lightness into her studio practice—a practice that can often feel weighed down by the bounds of time. Kemp’s chosen materials and tools are profoundly time-consuming. The hours upon days upon weeks that go into her works beget that every decision Kemp makes- creative or technical- is made decisively. The visual weightlessness of this body of work, especially in the face of the time and planning that goes into each piece, also lends to the exhibitions’ title. Kemp uses the warp quite minimally in many of these works. Because of this, these works are literally less bound, and more sculptural. The result is most often otherworldly forms, as with Electric Move (2022) and Breaking the Silence (2023). Kemp’s technique anchors her materials, and with increasing experimentation, the works feel less and less bound by the textile art tradition and read more as innovative and cross-disciplinary sculpture.

When creating her works, Marianne Kemp looks inward for inspiration. As she sits in her studio, her brain twinkles with possibilities. “Behind my loom, I'm in this bubble, and the ideas are just coming. I can just pluck them from the air,” she marvels. Kemp’s ideas grow and morph as she spends hours upon hours behind her looms. Her intimate knowledge of and skill in weaving enables and fuels this creative process. Kemp’s work is less about weaving as a craft and more about the process and effect of creating texture and volume, zones of interest that invite the viewer in. Kemp’s works are truly a viewing experience, and, at first, an encounter with the alien. From afar, they can resemble paintings, tapestries, or alien structures, but as the viewer steps closer, the works become an intricate, active surface. The more experimental and unconventional Kemp’s work becomes, the more technical it is. When a new idea bobs to the surface of Kemp’s mind, it follows that then each centimeter must be study and planned, and every rhythm must be calculated to bring that idea to life. Her brain is equal parts artist and engineer. Kemp’s ability and expertise enables her creativity, just as her creativity fuels her technical practice.

Marianne Kemp was born in Woerden, and began sewing at the age of 13. Kemp’s early interest in textiles led her to study art at The Royal Academy of Art and Design in The Hague before moving to London to pursue her Master of Arts from the Chelsea College of Art and Design, London. Upon completion of her Master’s, Kemp decided to stay in London and started working from Cockpit Arts Studios in Central London. In 2003 she returned to the Netherlands. In her studio she works with four different looms, each capable of different weaving possibilities. Kemp’s work has been exhibited in the United States, the United Kingdom, and across Europe, as well as in Seoul, South Korea. Her work has appeared in numerous publications in her native Netherlands and abroad, including magazines World of Interiors and Metiér, and books Transmaterial by Blaine Brownell and Contemporary Textiles by Drusilla Cole. Marianne Kemp lives and works in Zutphen, the Netherlands.

MAYA FRODEMAN GALLERY
66 South Glenwood Street, Jackson Hole, Wyoming 83001

18/04/16

Dutch Flowers, National Gallery, London

Dutch Flowers
National Gallery, London
6 April – 29 August 2016

The National Gallery presents an exhibition exploring the evolution of Dutch flower painting over the course of two centuries. This is the first display of its kind in the UK for more than 20 years.

Through 22 works, Dutch Flowers examines the origins of the genre, the height of its popularity in the Dutch Golden Age, and its final flowering in the late 18th century.

Approximately half the works on display come from the National Gallery Collection, and the rest from private collections. Many of the paintings are on display here for the first time, having only recently come to the Gallery on long-term loan.

At the turn of the 17th century, Netherlandish painters such as Jan Brueghel the Elder, Ambrosius Bosschaert, and Roelandt Savery were among the first artists to produce paintings that exclusively depicted flowers. The sudden emergence of this genre is undoubtedly linked to the development of scientific interest in botany and horticulture at the close of the 16th century. This period saw the establishment of botanical gardens in the Netherlands as well as a booming international trade in exotic cultivars. By the 1630s, speculative prices for the most coveted bulbs and flowering plants had reached spectacular heights – the so-called ‘tulip mania’. Prices soon crashed, however the Dutch enchantment with flowers endured.

The earliest flower paintings feature flat, symmetrical arrangements comprising flowers from different seasons. Over the course of the 17th century, bouquets became more relaxed, with asymmetrical rhythms and a willingness to overlap even the most costly flowers to create a more natural sense of depth. By the end of the 18th century, flower paintings were considered largely decorative, with a lighter palette more in keeping with ‘modern’ tastes.

Throughout the period, many artists favoured smooth copper or wood panel supports that enhanced the illusionistic perfection of their brushwork. Coinciding with the Chelsea and Hampton Court Flower Shows, visitors to the exhibition will have the opportunity to examine the flower paintings in detail to appreciate the stylistic and technical characteristics of each artist.

Betsy Wieseman, Curator of Dutch and Flemish Paintings said:
“This gorgeous display draws attention to the National Gallery’s extensive collection of Dutch flower paintings from the 17th and 18th centuries. It is the first exhibition in London to be devoted to this perennially popular theme in over 20 years. The recent addition of several extraordinary long-term loans to the National Gallery Collection, on view here for the first time, enables the Gallery to show how flower painting developed in the Netherlands over the course of two centuries. Every major figure in the genre is represented, including Jan Brueghel the Elder, Ambrosius Bosschaert, Jan Davidsz de Heem, Jan van Huysum, and Rachel Ruysch.”
Gabriele Finaldi, Director of the National Gallery said:
“The exhibition is an opportunity to admire the exquisite skill of Dutch flower painters over a period of nearly 200 years in works from the National Gallery and from private collections. They are paintings of astounding quality and beauty, often rich in symbolism and historic interest.“
THE NATIONAL GALLERY, LONDON

maj 26.11.2021

31/10/14

Henk Peeters, Tilton Gallery, NYC

Henk Peeters
Tilton Gallery, New York
October 31 – December 19, 2014

HENK PEETERS (1925 – 2013), a Dutch artist who exhibited worldwide with the Zero group, was an active participant and founder (with Armando and Jan Schoonhoven) of the Dutch Nul (Zero) group within The Netherlands and is known for organizing the historic exhibitions Nul 1962 and Nul 1965 at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, among others. He created a body of work in keeping with the beliefs of this loosely affiliated group of international artists, but is also remembered as a key organizer of Zero exhibitions, drawing connections between artists, reconstructing lost works and keeping their efforts alive. He was also a writer on the theory of art and a teacher till the end of his life, influencing and inspiring generations of younger artists, among them the Dutch artist Berend Strik, with his use of stitching, importantly executed by people instructed by the artist, but untouched by his own hand. Berend Strik exhibits new work at the same time at Tilton Gallery.

Henk Peeters’ work is included in the concurrent exhibition, Zero: Countdown to Tomorrow 1950s- 60s at the Guggenheim Museum, New York, whose introduction to the show succinctly summarizes Zero group as, “...an international network of like-minded artists from Europe, Japan and North and South America... who shared their aspirations to redefine art in the aftermath of World War II.” Founded in Dusseldorf in 1957 by Otto Piene and Heinz Mack and joined by Gunther Uecker in 1961, “They chose the name, as Otto Piene explained in 1964, to indicate ‘a zone of silence and of pure possibilities for a new beginning....’ ” Zero group did not have a manifesto, nor did they have members; it was not a movement; rather it was an attitude, a vision, and a new approach to natural processes and everyday materials and the exploration of light and space, as well as a rejection of the emotional abstract painting of Tachisme and Art Informel. The many (more than 140 globally) artists associated with Zero group, beside the three mentioned above, also include Lucio Fontana, Yves Klein, and Piero Manzoni. In 1961, Henk Peeters became a work of art himself when Piero Manzoni appointed him as one, signed and certified by the artist. He exchanged artworks with Klein and Fontana and built several “Metamatic” machines for Jean Tingueley.

Henk Peeters’ own work incorporated water, fire and smoke, feathers, stitching and artificial plastics, as represented in the works currently on exhibition at the gallery. For this show, organized with the help of Tijs Visser, founding director of the Zero foundation and initiator of the Guggenheim Zero show, works are brought together that span his concerns. These include an early work of water bags mounted on canvas from 1961, a canvas with a feather boa attached (relating to a motorized feather piece at the Guggenheim) from the 1970s and his first two fire paintings from 1959, as well as one work from 1962 with thread stitched onto the support. These are key examples of his original early works that survived destruction at the end of a solo show in 1966 at Galerie Orez in The Hague, called La derniere exposition (The Last Exhibition) when he proclaimed that “The age of the unique work of art is over....” He felt he could make his own duplicates, and went on to reconstruct many of the destroyed works, dating a stamp on the verso of these with both the date of the ‘original’ and the date of the reconstruction, and accompanying them with a statement saying “This work is an ‘original’ copy made by Henk Peeters after one of his early works.” Two of these “ ‘original’ copies” from 2011 are also on exhibit.

Born in The Hague, The Netherlands, in 1925, Henk Peters lived in Arnhem till his death in 2013. He taught at the Rietveld Art Academy in Arnhem from 1957 till 1972. He exhibited internationally in shows in Germany, Italy, Belgium, England and the United States and his work was exhibited at Galerie Schmela, Dusseldorf. He was given a retrospective in 2012 by the Gemeentemuseum, The Hague and his work is included in numerous museum collections, such as those of the Tate Modern, London and the Neuerburger Museum. This is his first solo exhibition in New York.

TILTON GALLERY
8 East 76th Street, New York, NY 10021

13/11/11

Breitner: Pioneer of Street Photography, Institut Néerlandais, Paris

Breitner: Pioneer of Street Photography
Institut Néerlandais, Paris
Through 22 January 2012

For the first time in France, the Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam), in collaboration with the Institut Néerlandais (Paris), has mounted a large retrospective exhibition of photographs taken around 1900 by the Dutch artist GEORGE HENDRIK BREITNER (1857-1923). Breitner is known mainly as a painter of cityscapes, nudes and genre studies. In the present exhibition, however, he emerges as one of the most intriguing photographers of his day, who recorded life in Amsterdam and other large cities such as Paris and Berlin in an eminently modern and personal style.

george_hendrik_breitner
GEORGE HENDRIK BREITNER Het Kolkje and the Oudezijds Achterburgwal in Amsterdam, 1894-1898 
Rijksmuseum’s collection. Courtesy of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam

Precisely a century ago, it became clear that G. H. Breitner was not only a major painter but also an excellent photographer. Since then Holland has staged numerous exhibitions of his photos, but in France he is less well-known as a photographer. His photographic work has been compared to that of such well-known French contemporaries as Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, and Eduard Vuillard. Like them, he had a penchant for city streets as well as the intimate family circle. Breitner's earliest photos probably date from 1889, a year or two after he settled in Amsterdam.

He was one of the first to explore the possibilities of the new hand-held cameras, which were easy to carry and inconspicuous. He photographed life on the streets of that dynamic city. In the approximately 30 surviving photographs taken during his various stays in Paris, we see a great many horses, which at the time dominated the street scene. In the photos featured in this exhibition, we see how Breitner 'experimented' with various photographic techniques. By photographing against the light, for example, he created powerful silhouettes. And by adopting a very  high or very low standpoint, he lent his photos an unusual perspective. Not only was he successful in evoking the vitality of a large city and the liveliness of its passers-by, he also knew how to create an alienating effect by photographing individuals  at very close quarters. Breitner was a voracious photographer, unflinching and impulsive. These qualities lend his photos an intensity that is lacking in the work of the professional photographers active in his day, who as a rule produced images that were  more static and perfunctory. Breitner broke with all the traditional rules and regulations.

BREITNER: PIONEER OF STREET PHOTOGRAPHY consists of a broad selection of photos taken by George Hendrik Breitner, mainly cityscapes and images of street life in Amsterdam. The Rijksmuseum has contributed 33 original enlargements, as well as one painting, one watercolour, two sketchbooks, and a well-worn, paint-spattered camera that belonged to Breitner. The Musée d'Orsay owns two paintings by G. H. Breitner. One of them, the early Clair de lune, is on display at the Institut Néerlandais. The exposition also features several dozen original small-format prints, as well as modern enlargements of Breitner's negatives, all on loan from the Netherlands Institute for Art History in The Hague.

INSTITUT NEERLANDAIS 121, rue de Lille -  75007 Paris, France
www.institutneerlandais.com

Since 3 November 2011 the Netherlands Institute for Art History (The Hague) has published a digital overview of the photographs of George Hendrik Breitner. For the first time, no fewer than 2,300 original photos from the Institute's own collection are now accessible to an international audience.



09/11/10

Monumentalism History and national identity in contemporary art at Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam

Monumentalism History and National Identity in Contemporary Art Proposal for Municipal Art Acquisitions 2010
Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
Through 9 January 2011

Monumentalism— History and National Identity in Contemporary Art: Proposal for Municipal Art Acquisitions 2010, is presented as part of The Temporary Stedelijk and occupy one half of the ground floor galleries. The 2010 presentation of this highly anticipated annual exhibition of works by artists living and/or working in the Netherlands will address the concepts of history and national identity. The exceptionally large number of diverse submissions this year—359 in all— demonstrates the particular significance and relevance of the theme. Organized by the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, the exhibition is curated by Jelle Bouwhuis, head of Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam, and features the work of 19 artists selected by this year’s Municipal Art Acquisitions jury.

History seems to be an increasingly important factor in how we identify ourselves, our cultures and our norms and values. In the Netherlands alone, the recent establishment of a national history canon and the initiative to found a Museum of National History provide tangible evidence of the trend. In the 19th century, a similar upsurge in historical awareness led to the production of large history paintings and monuments commemorating national heroes and historic events. Contemporary art increasingly reflects on the past in myriad ways. However, unlike these earlier precedents, today‘s art is seldom made specifically for the glorification of a nation; rather, it deals with the broadened scope of issues related to social developments such as globalization and transnationalism, which challenge a clear comprehension of what constitutes ―the national.

This idea forms the scope of this year‘s municipal art acquisitions exhibition, which shows a wide range of possible responses and takes the subjects of national identity and history beyond nostalgia for a mythical past. Instead, the works yield an inherent fragmentation. Demonstrating a keen awareness that documentary images in photography or film are never straightforward representations of historical reality, the artists address those representations through all kinds of media—painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, video, sound and installation—while offering various insights and perspectives on cultural artifacts, language, politics, labor and capitalism through their individual explorations of questions surrounding national identity. Many of the exhibited works are being presented to the public for the first time.

The 2010 Municipal Art Acquisitions jury has selected the following artists:

Yael Bartana (1970, Kfar Yehezkel, Israel)
Lonnie van Brummelen (1969, Soest, NL) / Siebren de Haan (1966, Dordrecht, NL)
Ruth Buchanan (1980, New Plymouth, New Zealand)
Hala Elkoussy (1974, Cairo, Egypt)
Marianne Flotron (1970, Meiringen, Switzerland)
Zachary Formwalt (1979, Albany GA, USA)
Melissa Gordon (1981, Boston MA, USA)
Nicoline van Harskamp (1975, Hazerswoude, NL)
David Jablonowski (1982, Bochum, Germany)
Rob Johannesma (1970, Geleen, NL)
Iris Kensmil (1970, Amsterdam, NL)
Gert Jan Kocken (1971, Ravestein, NL)
Job Koelewijn (1962, Spakenburg, NL)
Rachel Koolen (1979, Rotterdam, NL)
Renzo Martens (1973, Sluiskil, NL)
Lucia Nimcova (1977, Humenne, Slovakia)
Wendelien van Oldenborgh (1962, Rotterdam, NL)
Barbara Visser (1966, Haarlem, NL)
Mieke Van de Voort (1972, Nijmegen, the NL)

The members of the Municipal Art Acquisitions jury 2010 are: Jelle Bouwhuis (chairman of the jury and curator of the exhibition), Valentijn Byvanck (director of the Museum of National History), Binna Choi (director of Casco, Utrecht), Roy Villevoye (artist) and Krist Gruijthuijsen (co-director Kunstverein and freelance curator).

The Municipal Art Acquisitions exhibition offers an important overview of the current state of the visual arts, photography, design and the applied arts in the Netherlands. Organized annually by the Stedelijk Museum and curated by an invited guest curator, this event focuses on one particular discipline or theme. With each edition of the exhibition, works are selected by the Stedelijk Museum‘s director for acquisition for the collection of the Stedelijk Museum.

Monumentalism is accompanied by a CATALOGUE co-edited by Bouwhuis and Margriet Schavemaker, Head of Research and Collections, Stedelijk Museum, with contributions by the editors, Jennifer Allen (art critic), Hendrik Folkerts (art historian) and Joep Leerssen (historian). The book also include information on the artists in the exhibition and a reprint of an article titled ―The Goodness of Nations‖ by anthropologist/political scientist Benedict Anderson. The bilingual (Dutch and English) volume is co-published by the Stedelijk Museum and NAi Publishers. Suggested retail price: EUR 19.50.

The exhibition is partially funded by the City of Amsterdam.

STEDELIJK MUSEUM
Paulus Potterstraat 13, Amsterdam
28 August 2010 - 9 January 2011

27/09/08

Charley Toorop, Museum Boijams Van Beuningen, Rotterdam - Surtout pas des principes!

Surtout pas des principes! Charley Toorop
Museum Boijams Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
27 September 2008 – 18 January 2009

A total of 120 works have been gathered for the Charley Toorop (1891-1995) retrospective, including almost all her self-portraits. The exhibition ‘Surtout pas des principes! Charley Toorop’ has been put together by Marja Bosma, who has also written a book of the same name about the life and work of one of the foremost female Dutch artists of the 20th century.

Both the exhibition and the book contain a wealth of information about Charley Toorop, clarifying associations and highlighting influences, making it easier to see how key works from her oeuvre fit into her larger body of work. This large-scale retrospective clearly highlights Toorop’s importance for Dutch art.

For Charley Toorop, painting was the ultimate form of self-realisation, making her work both unavoidable and imposing. A perfect example of this is the self-portrait from 1928 that was recently acquired by Museum Boijmans van Beuningen.

Charley Toorop was the daughter of the symbolist Jan Toorop, who was one of the foremost artists in the Netherlands during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His ‘salad oil’ style is a term that remains in use even today. Toorop prepared his only child for life as an artist and despite being predestined to take up music, she chose instead to follow in her father’s footsteps. Rather than attending art school, she learned the trade from him. At an early age, she was part of ‘Het Signaal’, a predecessor of the Bergense School. Her work in those days was expressionistic in nature, featuring vibrant colours and sweeping brush strokes, which she combined with darker undertones and dissonant colours. A mystical experience of nature underpinned this work, which was representative of the Bergense School from the outset.

After an unsuccessful marriage to Henk Fernhout, with whom she had three children, she established herself in a house built specially for her in Bergen called ‘De Vlerken’, where she worked steadily on her painting career. Painting always occupied the primary position in her life. She travelled regularly, particularly to France. She also stayed regularly in Brussels. Her circle of friends was made up principally of prominent artists and intellectuals including the poets Adriaan Roland Holst and Henny Marsman, painter Piet Mondriaan, sculptor John Rädecker, architects Rietveld and Oud and the anarchist thinker Arthur Lehning.

Charley Toorop’s social and political commitment was the catalyst for her to develop her work into a style of confrontational realism, where she presented her subjects head on. This applies not only to her remarkable self-portraits in which she penetrates the viewer with her steely gaze, but also to her portraits of farmers, labourers and fishermen.

Publication: The retrospective ‘Surtout pas des principes! Charley Toorop’ is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue.

MUSEUM BOIJMANS VAN BEUNINGEN
Museumpark 18-20, 3015 CX Rotterdam

24/04/98

Jan van de Pavert, Heineken Prize for Art 1998

Heineken Prize for Art 1998

The Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences has awarded five important prizes for arts and sciences to four internationally renowned scientists and one highly talented Dutch visual artist. The Heineken Prizes are awarded every two years.

Jan van de Pavert (1960). This young Dutch artist has produced work of such creativity that even renowned museums have for some time focused on collecting his work.
With a love of architecture, Van de Pavert has designed in his mind an imaginary villa: `Villa Naispier'. Using objects of art and applying all means of artistic expression, he is building this villa and fitting it out. This is how he makes the villa tangible. Drawings, wall frescos, statues, scale models and computer animations are all used in creating the rooms, patios and gardens of his villa.

With his art, Van de Pavert is creating an opportunity for people to come and visit his villa. His fascination with this project makes him not only creative but also stimulating to visitors.

His sculptural skill is of a very high level. Jan van de Pavert uses it to give a very typical and individual and thereby a highly personal and original shape to his own fascination. To be so young and yet such a great artist is an exceptional thing, not only in the Netherlands.
23 April 1998

Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences - KNAW