Difference between revisions of "Netherlands"

From Monoskop
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(23 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
==Avant-garde==
 +
* [[De Stijl]]
 +
 +
; Literature
 +
* ''[http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=78b240a3da9d8279055f83691d936d4b Nijhoff, Van Ostaijen, "De Stijl": Modernism in the Netherlands and Belgium in the First Quarter of the 20th Century]'', ed. & intro. Francis Bulhof, The Hague: Nijhoff, 1976, 136 pp. {{en}}
 +
 
==Experimental film==
 
==Experimental film==
* Anna Abrahams, Mariska Graveland, Erwin van 't Hart, Peter van Hoof, ''MM2. Experimental film in the Netherlands since 1960''. Filmbank / De Balie, 2004. [http://www.lumen.nu/isabelle.vigier/mm2.html]
+
* Paul de Mol, Nelly Voorhuis (eds.), ''Het Experiment in de Nederlandse Film'', Amsterdam: Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, 1985. Catalogue. {{nl}}
* Anna Abrahams, Claartje Opdam, Mariska Graveland, ''film3 [‘kju:bIk fIlm]''. Amsterdam University Press, 2010. [http://www.aup.nl/do.php?a=show_visitor_book&isbn=9789089641991&l=2]
+
* Anna Abrahams, Mariska Graveland, Erwin van 't Hart, Peter van Hoof, ''MM2. Experimental film in the Netherlands since 1960'', Amsterdam: Filmbank & De Balie, 2004, 286 pp. [http://www.lumen.nu/isabelle.vigier/mm2.html]
 +
* Anna Abrahams, Claartje Opdam, Mariska Graveland, ''film3 [‘kju:bIk fIlm]'', Amsterdam: EYE Film Institute Netherlands & Amsterdam University Press, 2010, 390 pp. Catalogue. (in English/Dutch) [http://www.aup.nl/do.php?a=show_visitor_book&isbn=9789089641991&l=2] [http://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/8709701]
 +
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimental_film_in_the_Netherlands
  
 
==Computer art==
 
==Computer art==
Line 8: Line 16:
  
 
==Video art==
 
==Video art==
* Sebastian Lopez. ''A Short History of Dutch Video Art/ Una Breve Historia del Video Arte en Holanda''. Amsterdam: Gate Foundation, 2005. ISBN: 90-5973-031-3
+
* Sebastián López, ''A Short History of Dutch Video Art/ Una Breve Historia del Video Arte en Holanda'', Amsterdam: Gate Foundation, and Rotterdam: episode publishers, 2005. ISBN: 90-5973-031-3. [https://books.google.com/books?id=B1YNVsYlCnwC&printsec=frontcover] {{en}}/{{es}}
 +
* http://hdl.handle.net/11245/2.75975
  
 
==Electroacoustic and electronic music==
 
==Electroacoustic and electronic music==
[[Frans de Waard]]
+
[[Frans de Waard]], [[Dick Raaijmakers]]
  
 
; Resources
 
; Resources
Line 25: Line 34:
 
* ''Anthology of Dutch Electronic Music, 1999-2010'', Muziek Centrum Nederland & Basta Music, 2011. Book and 2CD. [http://www.mcn.nl/hedendaags/nieuws/artikel/artikel/4087/]
 
* ''Anthology of Dutch Electronic Music, 1999-2010'', Muziek Centrum Nederland & Basta Music, 2011. Book and 2CD. [http://www.mcn.nl/hedendaags/nieuws/artikel/artikel/4087/]
 
* Basta Music releases, [http://soundcloud.com/basta-music/sets selected tracks]
 
* Basta Music releases, [http://soundcloud.com/basta-music/sets selected tracks]
* Kees Tazelaar, ''On the Threshold of Beauty: Philips and the Origins of Dutch Electronic Music 1925-1965'', Rotterdam: V2_, 2013, 368 pp. [http://v2.nl/publishing/on-the-threshold-of-beauty] [http://thresholdofbeauty.com/]
+
* Kees Tazelaar, ''On the Threshold of Beauty: Philips and the Origins of Electronic Music in the Netherlands, 1925-1965'', Rotterdam: V2_, 2013, 316 pp; [https://monoskop.org/log/?p=22670 rev ed.], Rotterdam: V2_, 2020, 314 pp.
 +
* Robert Adlington, ''Composing Dissent: Avant-garde Music in 1960s Amsterdam'', Oxford University Press, 2013, 368 pp. [http://books.google.com/books?id=KZseAAAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover] [http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199981014.do]
  
==New media art, Media culture==
+
==Media art and culture==
; Cities
+
===Cities===
 
[[Almere]], [[Amersfoort]], [[Amsterdam]], [[Arnhem]], [[Deventer]], [[Eindhoven]], [[Enschede]], [[Groningen]], [[The Hague]], [[Leeuwarden]], [[Leiden]], [[Maastricht]], [[Nijmegen]], [[Rotterdam]], [[Utrecht]], [[Wageningen]].
 
[[Almere]], [[Amersfoort]], [[Amsterdam]], [[Arnhem]], [[Deventer]], [[Eindhoven]], [[Enschede]], [[Groningen]], [[The Hague]], [[Leeuwarden]], [[Leiden]], [[Maastricht]], [[Nijmegen]], [[Rotterdam]], [[Utrecht]], [[Wageningen]].
  
; Events
+
===Events===
 
* http://www.v2.nl/lab/blog/50-Years-of-Dutch-Media-Art-at-STRP
 
* http://www.v2.nl/lab/blog/50-Years-of-Dutch-Media-Art-at-STRP
  
; Literature
+
===Platforms, Archives===
* Geert Lovink. "Organizing Independant Media Spaces - Theory and Praxis from Amsterdam", lecture presented at Interstanding conference, Nov 1995, [[Tallinn]]. [http://www.interstanding.ee/i1/lovink.html]
+
* [http://mediakunst.net Mediakunst.net]. An online catalogue of media art from Dutch collections. The website is home to media art collections of Frans Hals Museum, Van Abbemuseum, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands, and [[LIMA]]. The works are available worldwide for research, knowledge exchange, long-term storage and presentation.
 +
* [https://www.digitalcanon.nl/ Digital Canon (1960–2000) of the Netherlands]. Experts from the field of digital culture selected twenty of the most prominent and influential works made on Dutch soil by artists who lived or worked here over a long period of time. The works and their makers are not all equally well known, yet this does not detract from their lasting influence on digital art and culture. Each of the works makes use of or responds to digital culture’s increasing impact on art and society.
 +
* [https://v2.nl/archive V2_archive] presents 35 years of activities of V2_, [[Rotterdam]]. The archive collects documentation about events, people, organizations and artworks, and  essays, interviews and publications that have played a role in V2_'s history. It catalogues V2_'s events from 1981 onwards, alongside many works that were shown, texts, photos and videos.
 +
* [https://hetnieuweinstituut.nl/en/inventorying-design-and-digital-culture-archives Inventorying Design and Digital Culture Archives]. Conducted by [[The New Institute]], [[Rotterdam]]. Commissioned by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. [https://hetnieuweinstituut.nl/sites/default/files/iadd_rapportage_mei2019.pdf Report published in June 2019] (in Dutch).
 +
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20110116062126/http://www.mediaartplatform.nl/ Media Art Platform] (MAP) was a social networking website for media art professionals and enthusiasts, initiative of the Netherlands Media Art Institute. (Archived 2011)
 +
* [[The Dutch Thing]] was a directory service for artists and their organisations. The dutch Thing maps content and context into simple lists and messages. Launched 1996 as part of [[The Thing]] network in [[Amsterdam]]. (Archived 2016)
 +
 
 +
===Literature===
 +
* Geert Lovink, [http://www.interstanding.ee/i1/lovink.html "Organizing Independant Media Spaces - Theory and Praxis from Amsterdam"], lecture presented at Interstanding conference, Nov 1995, [[Tallinn]].  
 
* Virtueel Platform, [http://issuu.com/virtueelplatform/docs/120111_mappingbinnenwerkengels_issuu3 ''Mapping Mediafestivals in the Netherlands''], 2012. [http://issuu.com/virtueelplatform/docs/mapping-mediafestivals Dutch edition]
 
* Virtueel Platform, [http://issuu.com/virtueelplatform/docs/120111_mappingbinnenwerkengels_issuu3 ''Mapping Mediafestivals in the Netherlands''], 2012. [http://issuu.com/virtueelplatform/docs/mapping-mediafestivals Dutch edition]
* Virtueel Platform, [http://issuu.com/virtueelplatform/docs/nederland-labland ''Mapping Nederland Labland''], 2012. (Dutch) [http://virtueelplatform.nl/activiteiten/nederland-labland]
+
* Virtueel Platform, [http://issuu.com/virtueelplatform/docs/nederland-labland ''Mapping Nederland Labland''], 2012. [http://virtueelplatform.nl/activiteiten/nederland-labland] {{nl}}
 
+
* Sanneke Huisman, Marga van Mechelen (eds.), ''A Critical History of Media Art in the Netherlands: Platforms, Policies, Technologies'', Prinsenbeek: Jap Sam Books, 2019, 376 pp. Review: [https://search.proquest.com/openview/cbdd1d89c1adb977a77eb9576a6e6ce7/1.pdf Lurk] (Comm Today). [https://www.japsambooks.nl/products/a-critical-history-of-media-art-in-the-netherlands-platforms-policies-technologies]
; Resources
+
* Amanda Wasielewski, ''[http://libgen.rs/book/index.php?md5=6BDA49B60C691778013986CC0B9C739D From City Space to Cyberspace: Art, Squatting, and Internet Culture in the Netherlands]'', Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021, 254 pp. [https://assets.ctfassets.net/4wrp2um278k7/3oZd32XCSAnDDC8XwIO78O/9bde7c26a0b96194dc56761d6d46877e/9789048553723_ToC_Intro.pdf Excerpt]. [https://www.aup.nl/en/book/9789463725453/ Publisher].
* [[Media Art Platform]] (MAP) is a social networking website for media art professionals and enthusiasts, initiative of the Netherlands Media Art Institute. [http://www.mediaartplatform.nl]
+
* https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Dutch_Digital_Arts
* [[The Dutch Thing]]. A directory service for artists and their organisations. The dutch Thing maps content and context into simple lists and messages. The original site was launched in 1996.
 
* http://www.witteveenbos.nl/en/art-and-technology-award
 
  
  
 
{{Countries}}
 
{{Countries}}

Latest revision as of 08:30, 22 September 2023

Avant-garde[edit]

Literature

Experimental film[edit]

  • Paul de Mol, Nelly Voorhuis (eds.), Het Experiment in de Nederlandse Film, Amsterdam: Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, 1985. Catalogue. (Dutch)
  • Anna Abrahams, Mariska Graveland, Erwin van 't Hart, Peter van Hoof, MM2. Experimental film in the Netherlands since 1960, Amsterdam: Filmbank & De Balie, 2004, 286 pp. [1]
  • Anna Abrahams, Claartje Opdam, Mariska Graveland, film3 [‘kju:bIk fIlm], Amsterdam: EYE Film Institute Netherlands & Amsterdam University Press, 2010, 390 pp. Catalogue. (in English/Dutch) [2] [3]
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experimental_film_in_the_Netherlands

Computer art[edit]

Video art[edit]

  • Sebastián López, A Short History of Dutch Video Art/ Una Breve Historia del Video Arte en Holanda, Amsterdam: Gate Foundation, and Rotterdam: episode publishers, 2005. ISBN: 90-5973-031-3. [6] (English)/(Spanish)
  • http://hdl.handle.net/11245/2.75975

Electroacoustic and electronic music[edit]

Frans de Waard, Dick Raaijmakers

Resources
  • The Ear Reader, a web magazine for contemporary composition based in the Netherlands, *2010.
Releases and literature

Media art and culture[edit]

Cities[edit]

Almere, Amersfoort, Amsterdam, Arnhem, Deventer, Eindhoven, Enschede, Groningen, The Hague, Leeuwarden, Leiden, Maastricht, Nijmegen, Rotterdam, Utrecht, Wageningen.

Events[edit]

Platforms, Archives[edit]

  • Mediakunst.net. An online catalogue of media art from Dutch collections. The website is home to media art collections of Frans Hals Museum, Van Abbemuseum, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, the Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands, and LIMA. The works are available worldwide for research, knowledge exchange, long-term storage and presentation.
  • Digital Canon (1960–2000) of the Netherlands. Experts from the field of digital culture selected twenty of the most prominent and influential works made on Dutch soil by artists who lived or worked here over a long period of time. The works and their makers are not all equally well known, yet this does not detract from their lasting influence on digital art and culture. Each of the works makes use of or responds to digital culture’s increasing impact on art and society.
  • V2_archive presents 35 years of activities of V2_, Rotterdam. The archive collects documentation about events, people, organizations and artworks, and essays, interviews and publications that have played a role in V2_'s history. It catalogues V2_'s events from 1981 onwards, alongside many works that were shown, texts, photos and videos.
  • Inventorying Design and Digital Culture Archives. Conducted by The New Institute, Rotterdam. Commissioned by the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. Report published in June 2019 (in Dutch).
  • Media Art Platform (MAP) was a social networking website for media art professionals and enthusiasts, initiative of the Netherlands Media Art Institute. (Archived 2011)
  • The Dutch Thing was a directory service for artists and their organisations. The dutch Thing maps content and context into simple lists and messages. Launched 1996 as part of The Thing network in Amsterdam. (Archived 2016)

Literature[edit]