Archive for the 'Dutch Arts & Design' Category

Dutch Arts & Design: From Amsterdam to New York for Borough(ed) Stories

judysny400An art trip to New York, with Silvia Russel. By Judy van Blaricon

A few weeks ago I went with Silvia Russel on a trip for borough(ed) stories-  I wasn’t to sure about this goal, or what it meant. But I really wanted to find out how a fellow-artist would ‘do New York’. I had never done that. And I like to share some here.

I live in Amsterdam, the city in which my father met my mother. He came from Indiana. He had travelled the world searching for something, and he found many things. For some reason the urge to leave must have been strong, cause he didn’t like to fly. He’d avoid the plane if possible. So when he wanted to introduce his future wife to his parents, he took the boat from Rotterdam to New York. All this I had to think of, jogging along the Hudson; all that is made possible 400 years ago, and how we shape current reality.

I met Silvia Russel at a Dutch network called Bites and Business. We liked each others ideas and doings. So when I heard about her plan, I asked if I could come too. This was fine, if I would to join the project”. I would bring reflections on the project in a constant flow. As well as do some thorough documentation. We both thought this a very good idea. That I am actually American could help too. ( like our own version of NY400.) Three days later we were on the plane. Work to do.

I asked if there was a plan. Borough(ed) stories- is the name of a book of her work, and it was going to be launched. Silvia’s gallery organized it for within two weeks, so she wanted to visit the gallery and check out how things were going.
The gallery turned out te be very nice. LMAKprojects.  and it is represented by a a great women (who happens to be Dutch.) Silvia also wanted to return to Bed Stuyvesant. For whom this name doesn’t ring a bell (despite famous connections as Spike Lee and notorious B.I.G ) : Bedford-Stuyvesant is a neighborhood in the central portion of New York city, USA, borough of Brooklyn.

Silvia has lived there some time ago. I guess that already is a sign that Bed Stuy was going upscale, and cappuccino, curry and Char-donnay already had mostly elbowed out crack in smalls’ old stamping grounds (not my line).

This process of upscale is also referred to as gentrification:  the change in an urban area associated with the movement of more affluent individuals into a lower-class area. Interesting maybe, but much more if you read insights on this of a Bed Stuy blogger, who quotes the artist Banksy.

I joined the first day but it didn’t work for me. I felt guilty. A useless and typical Dutch reaction. Silvia however, went every day. She helped to distribute packages of food (a.o) and listened to the stories of the people she met. This exchange is important. I could very much relate to the stories she shared. I did my work from Manhattan. We talked a lot. In a week or so the date of the launch was set with it’s perfect location: Participants Inc. at the Lower East side. Very good place for many insights on the topic.

It all worked out very well. For me, here the documentation stops. The stories I can’t tell you. They have become drawings by now.

It could be the book is still available at the Dutch museum for modern art, Het Stedelijk Museum. In september Silvia Russel will exhibit in New York at the White Box with Towing the Line, Drawing Space: 40 Contemporary Dutch Artists Defining the Moment in Holland. I have a a great time, am truly grateful for the opportunity, and glad I took it too. Off to the next creative journey, which can take us anywere!

About the author
Judy van Blaricon is  born in the Netherlands, in 1969.
Own company in online communication; heyjude.info
Studies art at the Rietveld Academie; Dogtime.

About the Artist
Silvia Russel is born in Nijmegen, the Netherlands, in 1969
Visual Artist http://www.silviarussel.com/index.html Works and lives in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

NY400 Dutch Arts & Design on September 22nd, 2009

Dutch Arts & Design: Kindred Spirits

Paul Laster and Renée RiccardoBy Paul Laster and Renée Riccardo


Iris van Dongen’s ‘Suspicious’ - a survey show of the artist’s large-scale drawings from 2003 to 2009, recently on view at the Stedelijk Museum Schiedam - was a striking exhibition by a rising star on the international art scene. Born in Tilburg in 1975 and living and working in Berlin, Van Dongen mixes pastel and charcoal in her works on paper that portray gorgeous, gothic mistresses and femme fatales.

We only recently discovered her work when Paul photographed New York magazine art critic Jerry Saltz alongside one of her pastels at the Armory Show. The figure in the drawing totally dwarfed him, and Van Dongen’s work forever stuck in our minds. We later discovered that she had shown in New York at Salon 94, a gallery run by our friend Jeannie Greenburg Rohatyn, but we had somehow missed that 2005 solo exhibition. (more…)

NY400 Dutch Arts & Design on June 26th, 2009

Dutch Arts & Design: Home where art thou?

Willum Geerts

By Willum Geerts


I’m home. That is, New York has become my second home in recent years. The chaos, speed, energy, 24hr noise, the extremes in about everything: It’s completely exhausting, but it gives me a great boost. The reason for my two months stay this time is the invitation to participate in the Homebase Project IV: A site-specific public art project exploring the meaning of “Home”.

And as soon as I set foot in the city “home” seizes me, since the promised accommodation, due to our friend the crazy crisis, is not available. So there’s nothing more to do than start running around straight away, checking listings and visiting places. Hunting for a home, or at least, somewhere I will feel at home. After a week I finally find a nice place in Williamsburg, I never would have thought this would take so much time and energy. Mundane life can start especially after I dig up my bike out of a friend’s basement. The city is mine again. (more…)

NY400 Dutch Arts & Design on May 15th, 2009

Dutch Arts and Design: Art in Amsterdam’s Intimate Spaces

Paul and ReneeBy Paul Laster and Renée Riccardo

After spending 30 years in the New York art world and seeing galleries evolve into big white boxes with mostly unapproachable owners and staff, it was refreshing to recently visit Amsterdam’s intimate art spaces and find the owners and directors sitting behind the front desk which, in most cases, was the only desk.

In New York, size matters. The galleries that have the most clout also occupy the most real estate, particularly Gagosian, Paula Cooper, David Zwirner, Matthew Marks, Mary Boone, and Deitch Projects. (more…)

NY400 Dutch Arts & Design on April 23rd, 2009

Dutch Arts & Design: TEFAF Maastricht has it all!

By Paul Laster and Renée Riccardo:

The Armory Show added a modern section, but Tefaf Maastricht has it all!

When the Armory Show added a modern wing to the 11th edition of the esteemed New York art fair in early-March, viewers flocked to see paintings and sculptures by Picasso, Giacometti, Rothko and other modern masters and vintage photographs by the likes of Steichen, Rodchenko and Arbus. The fair had previously been a venue for contemporary art, but now it was opening its doors to resale work by the big guns of the 20th century. Giving up its exclusivity was a bold move, but the Armory Show should have gone further by letting in great art of all ages. If it had done that, it could have competed with TEFAF Maastricht, which the International Herald Tribune recently praised as “the most outstanding fair in the world.” (more…)

NY400 Dutch Arts & Design on April 2nd, 2009