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Monday, April 20, 2009

collected reflections


St Jerome in his Study
Der heilige Hieronymus in seinem Gehäuse
Heilige Hieronymus in zijn studeervertrek
National Gallery, London



Observatorium: 'observations on the present state'

19 April thru 14 June 2009
Location: Hogewal 1-9
Opening: Saturday 18 April 2009, 5 pm
Preceded at 4 pm by an introductory conversation: Arno van Roosmalen & Bram Esser; Patrick van der Klooster (director AIR) & Observatorium.

Over the last decade Observatorium, which consists of Geert van de Camp, Andre Dekker and Ruud Reutelingsperger, has realised an international body of work, comprising various temporary and permanent three-dimensional pieces in the public environment. Stroom Den Haag presents the first major survey of these projects.

The history of Observatorium is recounted by Bram Esser, writer/philosopher with a strong love of the city, architecture and urban life. Like a scout, Esser has explored twelve Observatorium works on the basis of the topographical coordinates. He formulates, visualizes the perspective and questions. His journey past the different works, his travel account, the images and the souvenirs are all attributes of the narrative/presentation ‘observations on the present state'.

See the weblog of Bram Esser: http://cultuursteppe.blogspot.com/

Section of the galllery and the study

Archive in basement, study on first floor


These collected reflections, Esser's physical presence in a new Observatorium installation, the interaction with the visitors and the Observatorium archive together form the core of this retrospective. The projects of Observatorium are objects that virtually without exception are intended to create an opportunity for concentration, contemplation and observation. They are often monumental works of art erected alongside highways, in city parks, in new residential developments and near industrial heritage sites. Functioning in the realm of the visual arts, they take their themes from architecture and landscape design.

Last calculations in the Study


Antonella da Messina's painting ‘St. Jerome in His Study' (ca. 1460) serves as the foundation for the work of Observatorium. It depicts elements that also recur throughout the exhibition: a platform, cupboards, statues, texts, animals and a human figure who narrates, reads and symbolises contemplation.

Arrival of Observatorium archive



Publication
The book ‘Big Pieces of Time', an artist's book about the Observatorium design philosophy, will be published this year by 010 Publishers.

Reference Points
The Observatorium exhibition is the first in a series of ‘reference points'. Artists and artists' collectives play an important part in Stroom's policy and programme. Several of these artists can be seen as playing a directive role. In order to stay focused and inspired, Stroom aims to pay specific attention to these artists.

Acknowledgement
Mondriaan Foundation Amsterdam and The Netherlands Foundation for Visual Arts, Design and Architecture in Amsterdam.


19 Apr '09 - 14 Jun '09
Hogewal 1-9, The Hague
Entrance: free


Creative Capital at the entrance of Stroom

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Zwervende tentoonstelling in NAi





Tijdens Motel Mozaique strijkt de Zwervende Tentoonstelling (voorheen De Salon) op uitnodiging van het Observatorium
neer in het Nederlands Architectuurinstituut in Rotterdam. Daar, ín en vanuit de manifestatie Maak ons land,
is werk te zien van verschillende kunstenaars, aansluitend bij het thema ‘water’; in de Grote Zaal en de vijver.

Met:
Elena Beelaerts, Paul Bogaers, Karin van Dam, Duotuin, Carla Klein, Zeger Reijers,
Tonio de Roover, Erik Sep, Hulya Yilmaz en Sylvie Zijlmans.

Van donderdag 9 tot en met maandag 13 april.
Openingstijden: do/vrij/za van 10 tot 17, zo/ma van 11 tot 17
Museumpark 25, 3015 CB Rotterdam
.

Opening: vrijdag 10 april van 16 tot 18 uur.

Meer informatie: www.zwervendetentoonstelling.nl, www.motelmozaique.nl en www.nai.nl

Foto: Karin van Dam, Xiamen, China 2006