Monday Evening (online) Lecture by Henrietta Lidchi

Zemguani, 2015, by Kiowa jeweller Keri Ataumbi (b.1971).  Sterling silver, 18ct gold, brilliant cut and pure white diamonds, buffalo horn, elk antler, yellow lip mussel shell, and black-lipped mother of pearl. National Museums Scotland © V.2016.137, photograph Keri Ataumbi  

Jewellery: a Cultural History of Palpable Things Looking particularly at the history of jewellery made, used and sold by indigenous makers in the Southwest of the United States, this lecture will address questions of materials, technique and creation to argue that is it important to understand jewellery beyond art historical considerations. This is a personal reflection on materiality and meaning in the context of collecting, namely how, as a curator, I have selected from a field of making which has often, in the European context, not been seen as fine arts, but as craft, decorative arts, or ethnography. As the craft theorist Glenn Adamson has pointed out, this means that such work has sometimes been  “burdened” with ideas of supplementary or secondary value, arising from ideas of communal production, tradition and skill, rather than explored through ideas of personal expression, individual skill, conscious communication or historical change.  

Henrietta Lidchi is the Chief Curator of the National Museum of World Cultures. She earned her degree at Durham University and her PhD at the Open University, in anthropology, development and cultural studies. Her postgraduate research considered the types of visual images produced by British based international NGOs in the context of debates regarding the ethics and politics of representation. Prior to working in Leiden, Lidchi worked in National Museums Scotland as Keeper of World Cultures (2005-2017), and prior to that at both the Museum of Mankind (1994-2000) and the British Museum lastly as Deputy Keeper (2000-2002). In these roles she worked on temporary exhibitions and permanent galleries. Her main research interests currently are Native American art and material culture; dealing and trading in the American Southwest from the 1950s-1980s and museum histories of collecting and display, as well as contemporary artistic practices. Between 2019-2020 she was member of the Adviescommissie Nationaal Beleidskader Koloniale Collecties. She is currently on the Steering Group of Pilot Project: Provenance Research on Objects of the Colonial Era (with NIOD and Rijksmuseum) and the Benin Dialogue Group. She is Honorary Professor in the School of Political and Social Science at the University of Edinburgh as well as Visiting Scholar at CARMaH at Humboldt University Berlin.

If you are interested in joining via Zoom please contact us for more information.

Monday Evening (online) Lecture with Gitte Nygaard

Been there done what – from Binchotan and Black. Photographer: Petra van Velzen

To Grip and Grasp The opposable thumb, which evolved at least as far back as Homo habilis around 2.3 million years ago, is actually a big deal; with it, we can hold an object with one hand while the other works upon that object. Once we get something in our grip, cultural evolution takes over – with the hands not just developing skills, but serving as a conduit for values. The talk will be a tour through different projects and evolve around my ideas as a maker and artist.   

Gitte Nygaard – Artist & Maker works across disciplines to expand conversations and inspire awareness of the relationship between ourselves and the objects we live with. Her work moves beyond the gallery, connects the seemingly unexpected and explores the often overlooked. While Gitte’s range of work is broad and multi-faceted, connecting the strands is the idea of how jewellery and products create relations to people and between people. She creates artworks, functional objects, collections, commissioned pieces and project based collaborations.

If you are interested in joining via Zoom please contact us for more information

OPEN DAY 2021

Gerrit Rietveld Academie’s OPEN DAY 2021 takes place this Friday 29th of January 2021.

The Open Day of the Rietveld Academie 2021, a special year with a special online open day. On 29 January everyone will be able to join. Since distance is not relevant anymore, we welcome you from every possible spot where you have access to WiFi or 4G. Your own bed, your garden, lying on the floor, your favorite spot in the park, the back seat of the car, even the toilet if you like. The online Open Day will be filled with information, live streams, chats, portfolio tips, answers, video’s and more. Check in and join us on 29 January from 11 till 17 o’clock! Click here for more information about the Open Day! For this Open Day you don’t have to register. Click here for the LIVE STREAM, taking place throughout Friday 29.1.2021.

Register here to stay informed about dates and programs of Open Days in 2020-2021.