Hans Scholten
Machiel Botman
Andreas Gefeller
Terri Weifenbach
Marco Wiegers
Hans Gerritsen
'Shared Land' shows the photographs that Hans Scholten made for the 2005 Post Middendorp photography commission. In 'Hidden Sites', for several regional heritage institutions Machiel Botman, Andreas Gefeller, Terri Weifenbach and Marco Wiegers visualized the traces of historic castles and churches on sites in the Province of Groningen.
Shared Land, Hidden Sites
From December 10, 2005, through January 15, 2006, there are two exhibitions
in the new Noorderlicht Photogallery. Both are the result of photography
commissions.
'Shared Land' shows the photographs that Hans Scholten made for the 2005
Post Middendorp photography commission. This commission is a biennial
project of the Province of Groningen.
In 'Hidden Sites', for several regional heritage institutions Machiel
Botman, Andreas Gefeller, Terri Weifenbach and Marco Wiegers visualized the
traces of historic castles and churches on sites in the Province of
Groningen.
Post Middendorp photography commission, 2005
Hans Scholten: 'Shared Land'
Since time immemorial the Dutch have had to share their land with water.
This relation with water is one of the formative elements in the landscape.
According to the individual circumstances, in each case the landscape takes
on a specific and characteristic form.
In the exhibition 'Shared Land', in over 60 black and white photographs the
artist and photographer Hans Scholten gives us a picture of the way in which
this relation with water in Groningen is translated in the landscape.
What makes the Groningen landscape unique is its spaciousness. The flatness
and the ever visible horizon are overpowering. This vastness of the land
shades imperceptibly into that of the sea. Nothing seems to stand in the way
of the wind.
Over the course of history a network of waterways were constructed across
the land in Groningen, a coastal province with two seaports and numerous
wharves. That network, which in part was created by the cutting and shipping
of peat, and after that employed for many other purposes, divides the land.
It is a pattern in the landscape in which social, political, economic and
historical elements become visible. 'A landscape is changed by man. On the
other hand, the landscape itself shapes the people who live in it. The
mutual influences are subtle but unmistakable,' according to Scholten.
'Shared Land' is the outcome of the seventh Post Middendorp photography
commission. This documentary commission has been organized by the Province
of Groningen every two years since 1990. It is named for the medical doctor
Pieter Bloemers Middendorp and the photographer Tonnis Post, who together in
words and pictures recorded the conditions in which the population of the
rural areas of Groningen and Drenthe lived and worked at the turn of the
last century. The 2005 commission focused on the influence of shipping and
ship building on the Groningen landscape.
Hans Scholten (b. Roermond, 1952) studied graphic arts and sculpture at the
Minerva Academy in Groningen from 1971 to 1978. In realizing his projects he
frequently makes use of photography. Since 2000 Scholten has been an
instructor in the postgraduate photography program at St. Joost Academy,
Breda.
Hidden Sites
Of the 200 borgen (fortified farms and manor houses) that the province of
Groningen once had, only sixteen remain. The rest have disappeared or are
only still visible as ruins or as a relief in the landscape. The same fate
befell many of the province's historic churches and ecclesiastical sites.
In the spring of 2005 Terri Weifenbach (United states), Andreas Gefeller
(Germany), Machiel Botman (Netherlands) and Marco Wiegers (Groningen) each
in their own characteristic manner photographed the sites of borgen and
churches that had almost melted into the landscape.
The commission, coordinated by Noorderlicht, was organized at the initiative
of the Old Groningen Churches Foundation and Landscape Conservancy
Groningen. Together with the Private Historic Country Homes Foundation,
these organizations are working on the 'Hidden Sites' project, which through
the restoration of graves, roads, parks and water features is making twenty
of the province's borg and church sites visible again.
Earlier this year the exhibition 'Hidden Sites' was to be seen on the
Verhildersum estate in Leens. As a result of many requests, the presentation
has now been extended, in the city of Groningen.
A catalogue, with a selection of the photographs and an introduction by
Marjoleine de Vos (NRC-Handelsblad) appeared to accompany this exhibition.
Image: Hans Scholten
Opening: December 10
Noorderlicht Photogallery
Akerkhof 12, Groningen
Hours: Tuesday through Sunday 11:00-18:00
Free admission