Museum Het Domein
Sittard
Kapittelstraat 6
+31 046 4513460 FAX +31 046 4529111
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Mel Chin
dal 8/10/2010 al 11/12/2010

Segnalato da

Karin Adams


approfondimenti

Mel Chin



 
calendario eventi  :: 




8/10/2010

Mel Chin

Museum Het Domein, Sittard

Disputed Territories. For roughly 35 years, Chin has been developing a unique, socially engaged and self-willed body of work in which cultural diversity and global solidarity play an important role. In awarding the Fritschy Culture Award 2010 to Mel Chin, the jury members emphasize the critical engaged nature of this prize and the expression of contemporary global issues.


comunicato stampa

The exhibition Disputed Territories from the Fritschy Culture Award winner 2010

In 2003, the biennial Fritschy Culture Award was established, named after the translator and polyglot Gerard Fritschy (1919-1999), out of whose bequest the MEG Foundation in Sittard-Geleen finances the prize. The prize was originally intended for “visual artists who offer significant contributions to multicultural debate.”
Now that such terminology is somewhat out of date, the focus is on artists who give shape to cultural diversity, who make world-citizenship the subject of their art, or who build bridges between different cultures.
Originally, the prize was € 5000, along with an exhibition at the Museum Het Domein and an accompanying publication. The first few prizes – named the Fritschy Stadscultuurprijs Sittard-Geleen since 2007-2008 – were awarded to artists from diverse cultural backgrounds living in the Netherlands or Europe: Ni Haifeng, Hadassah Emmerich, and Remy Jungerman. From 2010, the prize money for the Fritschy Culture Award has been increased to € 10,000 through the efforts of Museum Het Domein, with the intention of making the prize more internationally oriented. The jury for this year included: Peter Fransman (director of Museum Het Domein, Sittard), Natascha Bär (art historian and MEG Foundation committee member), Lily van Ginneken (former director of Stroom HCBK, the Hague), Kitty Zijlmans (professor of contemporary art history, University of Leiden), Roel Arkesteijn (curator of contemporary art, Museum Het Domein, Sittard), and Wiel Gielkens (supervisor; chairman of the Fritschy Prize Foundation).
The judges selected from 25 artists who were nominated by a group of advisors attached to various Dutch art institutes and who then responded to the request to send in documentation of their work. In terms of the candidates, the 2010 prize demonstrated a shift to a more international environment: roughly half of the nominated artists live in the Netherlands; the rest live abroad. The judges observed that the artists were of a high quality.

From the list of nominated artists, one conclusive winner emerged: the American artist Mel Chin (Houston, Texas, 1951). For roughly 35 years, Chin has been developing a unique, socially engaged and self-willed body of work in which cultural diversity and global solidarity play an important role. In Europe, his work has not received the recognition that it has in the United States. In his art, Chin gets at the important questions of his time. His works can be characterized as “sculptural witnesses to ecological and political tragedies.”
Whether examining American imperialism in Central America, September 11, the fate of the Native American Indians, civil wars in postcolonial Africa, abuse at Guantanamo Bay, the extinction of animal species, or the way in which people pollute their natural resources, Chin creates intelligent and penetrating works with the compactness and impact of aphorism. Every new project he tackles leads to a surprising turn in his work. His project Revival Field, perhaps his most well-known work, has made him one of the most important pioneers of ecological art.
With his activist view of art, he seeks the edges of the discipline and creates an arena in which social and (geo)political themes can be coupled with ideas from philosophy, biology, history, religion, anthropology, literature, and alchemy. Chin not only opens up an interdisciplinary discourse and possibilities for change with his work, but he also gives it an exciting form that often appeals to the various senses. The jury praises the unique way in which Chin, in many of his projects, creates a form of art in which participation and other forms of engagement are key. In awarding the Fritschy Culture Award 2010 to Mel Chin, the jury members emphasize the critical engaged nature of this prize and the expression of contemporary global issues.

Fundred Project

Operation Paydirt/Fundred Dollar Bill Project is a national, artist-driven, multidisciplinary project with a critical mission: to support a solution to lead-contaminated soil in New Orleans and to help end this form of childhood lead poisoning.  If lead poisoning leads to poor performance in the schools, learning disabilities, and juvenile delinquency, as all studies indicate, this project has the potential to counteract an environmental factor that contributes to undermining the health of society.

Operation Paydirt brings together the science to transform the lead so that it is no longer harmful and a plan with the potential for creating a model for all cities facing the threat of lead-contaminated soil.  The project is in collaboration with US EPA Region IX Emergency Response to implement Operation Paydirt’s protocol for mineral neutralization of lead found above tolerable thresholds.  With these demonstration sites, ultimately Operation Paydirt will develop and deliver a citywide implementation strategy.
 
The Fundred Dollar Bill Project is designed to raise awareness of this environmental threat and collect the funds necessary for citywide implementation. Students across the country are currently drawing Fundred Dollar Bills - original, hand drawn interpretations of $100 bills. The Fundred Dollar Bill “artworks” made by students are being collected by armored truck and delivered to Washington DC, where an even exchange of the value of their art currency for actual funds and support will be requested.

The goal is to support the rebuilding of New Orleans, and every other city compromised with this environmental problem, as a lead safe city from “below the ground up.” 

The HEALTH of CHILDREN across the NATION is POISONED by the VERY GROUND they PLAY ON OPERATION PAYDIRT enlists the science to neutralize the lead in the soil.
In New Orleans 86,000 properties are estimated to have unsafe levels of lead in the soil and 30% of the inner city childhood population is affected by lead poisoning.
The FUNDRED DOLLAR BILL PROJECT is the method to move CONGRESS to ACT together WE CAN unlock the FUNDS & SOLUTION to PROTECT what is TRULY VALUABLE CONNECTING and COLLECTING the VOICES of our country’s YOUTH through the Fundred Dollar Bill Project $300 Million in CREATIVE CASH to be picked up and DELIVERED to Washington, D.C

In the Netherlands the Fundred bill are collected in Museum Het Domein. You can download the Fundred bill on this website of get them at Museum Het Domein.

For more information see http://www.fundred.org

The award ceremony will be held on Saturday the 13th of November in Museum Het Domein.
On Sunday the 14th of November Mel Chin will give a lecture at 15.00 hr.

Image: Safehouse, a house transformed into a bank vault, the interior walls lined with thousands of hand drawn Fundred Dollar Bills.

Press contact:
Roel Arkesteijn T +31 (0)46 451 3460; roel.arkesteijn@hetdomein.nl
Karin Adams T +31 (0)46 45 13 460 karin.adams@hetdomein.nl

Museum Het Domein
Kapittelstraat 6 - 6131 ER Sittard The Netherlands
Opening hours:
from Tuesday through Sunday from 11 am till 5 pm
Admission:
Adults € 4,00
Discount cards € 2,00
Groups of a minimum of 15 persons € 3,00
Free admission: Youngsters up to 18 years, people with a Museumjaarkaart, Friends of Het Domein and everybody on the first sunday of the month

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