project
netherlands
JeanneVanHeeswijk
artist
public spaces
The Rotterdam-based artist Jeanne Van Heeswijk's work engages with the setting
up of 'collaborative production' between people involved in processes of urban
development. Through methods that focus on 'acting together' she attempts to
establish opportunities for people to form and establish interest groups, small
communities in themselves, in order to effectively discuss and trigger change on
a neighbourhood level. Van Heeswijk describes her position as that of a mediator
between situations, places and people – facilitating various kinds of open
actions and interactions. Yet, this role is not simply about the integration of
many voices, but about questioning and confronting all involved, from children
to city officials, from policy makers to planners and from 'insiders' to
'outsiders', in order to 'generate models that do justice to, for instance, the
complexity of the integration issue.'
Het Blauwe Huis (The Blue House), a project which started in 2005 and was
situated in a real house within one of the to be developed housing blocks, was
an attempt to provide a space for the messy, lived and indeterminate activities
in an otherwise entirely planned and controlled development plan for the IJburg
area in Amsterdam, an area which today provides 18,000 dwellings for 45,000
residents. Over a four-and-a-half-year period, van Heeswijk curated the detached
single-family house to become a space for international artists, writers, and
architects from which to engage with the growing population of IJburg and the
wider public. At the same time, the house temporarily provided turban functions
not yet provided for in the new neighbourhood: a children's library, a cheap
restaurant, a flower shop. Over the duration of the project and through the
involvement of thousands of participants, the house became an incubator, a
condenser, from which the use and appropriation of the urban realm and public
space could be studied and intervened from.
Another focus of Van Heeswijk's work are young people and adolescents. Commonly
overlooked in planning processes, she is interested in finding mechanisms
through which to empower this group to voice their opinions and to critically
engage and participate. The project 'Face Your World' was initially a
collaboration with the Wexner Center for the Arts in Ohio, USA, in 2002 and
engaged local children aged 6 to 12 to use computers and especially developed
programmes to rethink, rearrange and reconfigure their neighbourhoods. The
project was re-enacted in 2005 in the Slotervaart area of Amsterdam and again in
Rotterdam in 2006, when 2,500 children participated in workshops and actions to
design their own museum park for the area between the OMA designed Kunsthal and
Museum Boijmans.
In 2010, Van Heeswijk was invited by the Liverpool Biennial to contribute to the
project 2Up 2Down and subsequently also brought the Manchester-based cooperative
practice Urbed on board. Here, the artist and architects are working together
with a group of young people from Liverpool's Anfield / Breckfield with the aim
to develop a series of empty 2up-2down properties into 'affordable retrofit of a
community facility and local housing'.
Van Heeswijk's approach foregrounds the social aspects of engagement and the
design of processes that are interested in the building up of skills – from
communication to construction. Aware that empowerment is strongly connected to
knowledge of, for example processes, systems and mechanisms and the ability to
express this knowledge, her work strategically connects different actors to
enable social change. Radicalizing the Local, a network of interventions, Museum
of Arte Útil - Van Abbemuseum The Blue House (Amsterdam IJburg, 2005-2009)
Jeanne van Heeswijk icw Herve Paraponaris and Dennis Kaspori Pump up The Blue
(by Herve Paraponaris, with Recycloop by 2012 architecten) Photo: Ramon Mosterd
Face Your World, Urban Lab Slotervaart (Amsterdam Slotervaart, 2005) Jeanne van
Heeswijk & Dennis Kaspori Neighbourhood presentation Photo: Dennis Kaspori
Source texte Source Main image Image jeanneworks.net