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Heating up recycled bottle glass in ceramic crucible in metal furnace
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

UP: Successful 13th DDW

THE GLASS HEAP CHALLENGE NL/2014

Dutch Design Week (DDW) reflects on a successful thirteenth edition. In spite of the autumnal weather, the nine-day Week retained an optimistic atmosphere. It is estimated that the event attracted more than 250,000 visitors.
 
International stage
Under the banner of the energetic and positive theme UP, the programme showed off work by renowned designers and, following tradition, also offered plenty of space for young talent and experiment. Partly thanks to attention from a large number of professionals from the design world, commerce and media partners, the event demonstrated its purpose as an international stage for design. The weekends were especially busy. The thirty-five VOLVO Design Rides were very popular with the visitors: the free taxis transported approximately 10,000 people each day.

Posted 3 November 2014

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This year, there was a strong focus on the use of existing raw materials and material research. Remarkably enough, this often happened in cooperation, mainly in (temporary) collectives. There was a leading role for social design, a movement offering sustainable alternatives for all sorts of aspects in our society. Martijn Paulen, Dutch Design Week director: ‘During DDW, designers’ drive to create a better world appears to influence other configurations. Designers, but also scientists, artists, inventors, students and other creatives have ideas about and solutions for today’s challenges. They proved that again last week. This is very encouraging.’

DDW in figures
Visitors: 250,000+
Designers: 2,400
Events: 387
Locations: 86
 
Dutch Design Week
18 - 26 October 2014, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
Web: www.ddw.nl
Facebook: www.facebook.com/dutchdesignweek
Twitter: @dutchdesignweek, #DDW14

Opening Dutch Design Week: UP!
Photography © Jeroen van der Wielen

THE GLASS HEAP CHALLENGE NL/2014

Matthew Durran talking with Bert Staal
Initiator The Glass Heap Challenge
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Part of the DDW 2014 was THE GLASS HEAP CHALLENGE NL/2014
Starting at the 18th of October we welcomed the Masters Arnout Visser, Daniel Geamperle, Jan-Willem van Zijst and Matthew Durran. The Master class offered the possibility for artists, designers and architects to study the possibilities of the reuse of glass. These working processes were open for the public.

Read all on recycling/up-cycling, the masters, the symposium and organisation>

Mary-Ann Scheurs
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Angela van der Burght
coordinator The Glass Heap Challenge NL/2014
General editor Glass is more!
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Key note speaker Caroline Prisse
Director Studio Van Tetterode
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Lex van Lith
Director Beeldenstorm
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Mireille Houtzager
Director Drafts for Arts
General editor Textile is more!
Lecture Mirror Mirror on the Wall.....
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Hélène Besançon: Conservator and curator National Glass Museum Leerdam
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Daniel Geamperle talks to Caroline Prisse
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Arnout Visser
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Jan Walgrave and Sandra De Clerck
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Jan-Willem van Zijst
Director Fenestra Ateliers
Partner Beeldenstorm
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

   

Symposium

At Monday the 20th a full program was offered in the Symposium at the Van Abbemuseums auditorium for the participants The Glass Heap Challenge NL/2014, students from different academies and glass departments and guests. As a keynote speaker Caroline Prisse led us on an incredibly professional and cheerful way through all lectures. After an enthusiastic word by Marie-Ann Schreurs, alderman of the city of Eindhoven, Lex van Lith, director Beeldenstorm (the hosting workplace) told about the vision of Beeldenstorm; Mireille Houtzager talked in her lecture Mirror, Mirror on the use of material in making art, design or architecture, while Hélène Besançon, curator of the National Glass Museum talked about giving glass a second life and challenging all visitors to come with plans to show good works by reusing glass. Jan Walrave, former director of several museums in Flanders talked on the typical features of glass and its development in art.

Symposium at the Van Abbemuseum
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Ingrid Bongers
Corrector and translator
Editorial group Glass is more!
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

After the lunch break Angela van der Burght flew with very interesting images as a high speed train through history to visualize how glass changed the world and will keep on changing our future world.
Then the Masters showed their visions on glass and their works.

Ingrid Bongers welcomed all persons present as hostess of the symposium.

Jan-Willem van Zijst and Daniel Gaemperle
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Filling the kiln with the work of Jan Giliam van Arkel
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Katie Lagast
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Work by Katie Lagast
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Some of the works by Bert Staal and Matty Christensen
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

And more tests in the kiln using the recycled glass of old bottles
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Participants Master class The Glass Heap Challenge NL/2014

Jan Giliam van Arkel, Berrie van Beers, Katie Lagast, Bert Staal, Matty Christensen, Frances Woodhead, Alisa Osinga, Maria Hees and Tiago sa da Costa. 

Matty Christensen and Berrie van Beers
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Jan Giliam van Arkel and Jan-Willem van Zijst
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Frances Woodhead
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Exposition

Saturday afternoon we cleaned out all kilns and the working place to build a glass blowing stage for the next day and also an exposition on the participants work process and final statement to be evaluated by all participants, Lex van Lith and the Masters.
 

Beeldenstorm
Master class work place
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Maria Hees
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Berrie van Beers
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Bert Staal & Matty Christensen
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Beeldenstorm
Foto: Rudi Klumpkens 

Upcycling-recycling

Arnout Visser and the glass blowing team
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Finally on Sunday the exposition was open for the public while Arnout Visser and his team of glass blowers with Josja Caecilia Schepman and Marek Effmert- worked with the participants in blowing up old glass bottles in their moulds or forming them freely.

Alisa Osinga
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Maria Hees
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Arnout Visser, Josja Caecilia Schepman and Marek Effmert
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Making of the work from Tiago sa da Costa
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

First results after cooling
Photo: Lex van Lith

Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

Performance

In the afternoon Two Times Soft: The Glass Performance, A breathtaking performance in which Hanne Sa is looking to find her way through a labyrinth of 500 broken beer glasses. On the one hand the vulnerable body, on the other hand, the dangerous glass.

Glass performance-United-C
United-C is well known for their innovative live art on the boundaries dance, performance and theatre. The work is more and more being performed outside Holland.
Since 2009, director Maarten van der Put has been working on a series of nudes, Together they form a menu of performances that ‘uncensoredly’ show the body in confrontation with life.
For United-C nakedness is intrinsic to the human who wants to hold on to - or rediscover - his authenticity. The binding factor within these ‘Performances of the Body’ is the power and vulnerability of the individual performer who literally throws himself into battle., They can be read as a collection of intimate documents.
 
The Glass performance:
A girl in between 500 broken beer glasses.
Like a snake she’s searching for her own way in this labyrinth of glass. In a breath taking performance with the vulnerability of the body on the one hand and the sharpness and danger of the glasses in the other. For 18 minutes you forget to breath. An hallucinating trip. One of the most exciting kind.
 
The Glass performance is performed by : Hanne Schillemans
 
The music of Ralph Timmermans increases the intensity of this contrasting experience. Sacred, exciting and comforting at the same time.
 

Hanne Schillemans preparing the scene for the performance
Photo: Fenestra Ateliers

Staining glass by Jan Giliam van Arkel and Daniel Gaemperle
Photo: Daniel Gaemperle

After nine days of hard working and overcoming most technical difficulties raised, we had one flowing experience of incredible interesting encounters, talks, experiences and results. With UP as the leading theme for the Dutch Design Week 2014, we UP-cycled glass with plentiful possibilities for the participants’ future.
 
We thank Beeldenstorm with staff for their hospitality, good care and awesome commitment.
Also we have to thank all sponsors and funds which made the Glass Heap Challenge NL/2014 possible.

Read Review with participant's profiles>
 
Angela van der Burght
Coordinator The Glass Heap Challeng
e

More information:
www.glassheapchallenge.com
www.beeldenstorm.org
www.glassismore.com

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