Elasticsearch error: {"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"index_not_found_exception","reason":"no such index [entities_en]","resource.type":"index_or_alias","resource.id":"entities_en","index_uuid":"_na_","index":"entities_en"}],"type":"index_not_found_exception","reason":"no such index [entities_en]","resource.type":"index_or_alias","resource.id":"entities_en","index_uuid":"_na_","index":"entities_en"},"status":404} Saskia Noor van Imhoff #+ 21.00 - Archive - de Appel Amsterdam
exhibition
2016
Saskia Noor van Imhoff #+ 21.00

Saskia Noor van Imhoff #+ 21.00

06.02–10.04.2016
Opening: Friday February 5, 6-9 pm
de Appel, Prins Hendrikkade 142, Amsterdam

From February 6 till April 10 de Appel arts centre presents the first institutional exhibition by Saskia Noor van Imhoff in the Netherlands. For the exhibition she created an architectural intervention which will occupy the entire first floor of de Appel arts centre. Saskia Noor van Imhoff will examin in her work # +21.00, the architectonic aspects of the building. As though performing a metaphorical archaeological dig, she uncovers visual and conceptual connections in an associative manner, subtly exposing underlying structures of collecting, exhibiting and conservation.

#+21.00
The site-specific installations by Saskia Noor van Imhoff depart from elements that usually belong to the backside of art institutions, such as the depot, the spatial mapping, and the conservation and climate regulations. In a utilitarian infrastructure, both existing and newly made objects, artworks by other artists, but also everyday objects such as clothing, come together in an associative manner. With this installation Van Imhoff investigates how artworks and artifacts act in different stages within an exhibition and how they are treated. She poses the question of how we classify and interpret the world around us. Which status and value do we attach to the objects and systems with which we surround ourselves?

In #+21.00 Van Imhoff approaches de Appel arts centre as an artificial archeological research site. For Van Imhoff, archeology is not solely a formalistic interest, but also functions as a metaphor for a timespan that can be related to a personal mental and physical state. While in a depot we attempt to conserve objects from the test of time with ‘make up’, we surely also attempt to investigate and conserve ourselves.

Van Imhoff intuitively exposes ‘strata’ of a specific timeframe and consequently reveals the veiled structures of exhibition making, conservation and programming. In her installation the institution and the artwork are fused together, proving that it is nearly impossible to separate an artwork from the environment in which it is presented.

Saskia Noor van Imhoff
Saskia Noor van Imhoff (1982) lives and works in Amsterdam. She studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy (2001 – 2008) and was a resident artist at De Ateliers (2011 – 2012) and Kunstlerhaus Bethanien (2013). In 2013 she was nominated for the Volkskrant Beeldende Kunstprijs, for which she made a presentation in the Stedelijk Museum in Schiedam. Her work has been shown in ‘Affinities #1’, Gallery Fons Welters, Amsterdam; Gabriele Senn Gallery, Vienna, Austria; ‘#+14.00’, Gallery Fons Welters, Amsterdam; Ruisdael Stipendium i.c.w. Willem de Rooij, Bad Bentheim, (DE); 'Language Leaps', Plan B, Berlin (DE); ‘R&D Department of Black Mountain College show’, W139, Amsterdam; ‘As Everything Moves’, Node, Center for Curatorial Studies, Berlin (DE).

Coinciding with the exhibition in de Appel arts centre, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam will show from February 13 until 8 May 2016 a new installation based on works by Van Imhoff that have recently been included in the collection. The two exhibitions will be connected through a publication that will be available through both institutions. The publication #+ 22.00, in the form of posters, is made by Jasper Coppes, Phil Baber and Saskia Noor van Imhoff.

Attention: the exhibition by Saskia Noor van Imhoff is not accesable for diabled people.

The exhibition is made possible with the support of the Amsterdam Fund for the Arts (AFK), Contronics Engineering B.V., Gallery Fons Welters and the Mondriaan Fund.