Archive for the tag 'Dutch Design'

NY400 Events: Preparing for Pioneers of Change

Renny RamakersBy Renny Ramakers

I am writing this blog while working on the last preparations for Pioneers of Change. These last moments are as usual full of tensions. We have disagreements with the graphic designers, who think that we are making too many changes in the texts, with the risk of destroying their precise design. They are right, with so many parties involved in the process and people on holidays, changes after changes came.

We will try to get our signage system placed on the island without disturbing their rules and regulations. We want a huge bill board, shouting: LAND! It should be the first thing you see when arriving by boat.  Let’s keep our fingers crossed… We asked the designer of the VIP room, which is furnished with Droog pieces,  to change his beautiful design. The balloons he envisioned hanging from the ceiling turned out to be not a good idea because we just heard from one of our team members that she is allergic to latex. Yesterday we rejected the designer’s alternative, again very charming, but not environmentally sound. We feel we are driving him crazy, but we are convinced that he will come with another beautiful solution.

We are negotiating with New York catering companies because we have the feeling that they are overcharging us. We have to arrange extra toilets because we expect 700 people to attend our VIP opening. Security rules oblige us to fence our space during the opening and have the audience checked for their age. Now we have to design wristbands that they can wear as proof of being over 21. That’s all because we are serving delicious cocktails.

Our two sweet interns, we call them Tom & Jerry,  are stuffing the invitations in the envelopes while watching a movie.  I hope that can be sent out today because they proceed very slowly. Tomorrow the last shipment will leave the country and the team will fly over next week, surely to what will be an exciting event.

And at the other side of the ocean our New York team is busy having the houses cleaned and preparing all electrical matters. Sixty different second hand chairs for the Open Talks house are waiting to be painted. We really did not want to ship a lot of stuff and rely as much as possible on old furniture to be found in New York. I was a bit worried about being able to find so many of them. But our New York producer did!
Our New York team also found 15 elderly people, eager to serve food and drinks in our Go Slow house, A tough job to spot elderly people living in elderly people’s homes that actually look like elderly people are supposed to look and not like those botoxed and facelifted old girls so common in the U.S.  But we have got them! And they will serve you slowly but attentively.

It’s no wonder two weeks time before the event, that the moment is full of scary excitement, when bringing together so many parties and bridging two continents. I can’t wait to be on Governors Island, to see the results and to hear all the reactions of the visitors.

About the author
Renny Ramakers conceived and curated Pioneers of Change, and is art critic and co-founder and director of Droog, the conceptual design company which was set up in 1993. She organizes design exhibitions, is member of the jury of various design prizes and is giving lectures and workshops worldwide. Ramakers took part in governmental advisory boards, amongst others as a member of the Council of Culture (1995-2001). As an art critic, Ramakers wrote for international magazines, books and catalogues and published several books under her own name.

ALSO READ: Pioneers of Change: A Sneak Preview

NY400 NY400 Events on August 27th, 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

NY400 Events: Fashioning Felt

alissa

By Alissia Melka-Teichroew

Fashioning Felt Exhibit is an exhibit currently shown at Cooper Hewitt. The exhibition focuses on felt that has been produced by traditional hand- or machine-felting processes. The pieces shown, range from clothing to furniture, from jewelry to felt installations.

The set up of the exhibit to me is in some ways interesting and inspirational, especially the pieces from the early 19th and 20th century from Japan and Turkey, also the video showing how felt is still being made in Mongolia. However I had hoped they would show more of the process of felting (both industrial and handmade felting methods), to give the viewer even more sense of what they are looking at. Another downside, is the fact that there is very little touching involved nor any of the raw wool available to see or feel. As a designer I have some knowledge of felting and the work that goes into it, but this is not something everyone knows, and thus can appreciate, if they are not educated. The catalogue of the exhibit however seems to give a clearer view on felt as a material. (more…)

NY400 NY400 Events on April 2nd, 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