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Thursday, April 25, 2024

Event News

All events from Eindhoven

Hiphoppers dance school In2Dance second at World Cup

The hip-hop dancers of The Invasion, part of dance school In2Dance in Best finished second at the world championships in Blackpool. The Invasion consists of 29 dancers between the ages of 12 and 22.

Already in the first preliminary round it appeared that the dancers from Best were one of four teams to go directly to the finals, allowing them to skip all other preliminaries. Trainer Cem Sahin: “I am speechless…. I never expected that we were allowed to go to the World Cup. That we also won a second prize now is a dream come true”.

The trainer, who spent about five hours a day with his dancers during the last days of the summer vacation, is proud: “They did their best and put a lot of time and energy into this adventure. We really entered into this as a team and to be rewarded with this award is amazing”.

Source: Studio040

Translated by: Bob

Winners of Eindhoven Culture Prize presented

Het Stroomhuis, Ballroom Functions and Café Wilhelmina are the winners of the Eindhoven Culture Prize. The prizes were presented in the Effenaar on Wednesday evening.

Cultuurpodium Stroomhuis won the appreciation prize, Eindhoven Ballroom Functions received the incentive prize and Café Wilhelmina received the audience award.

Stroomhuis (Stream house)

The Stroomhuis on Fellenoord is a music venue that also functions as a breeding ground for makers. The place is used for various activities, as a meeting place and sanctuary for new music. The jury praises the authenticity and autonomy of the Stroomhuis.

Ballroom Functions

Ballroom is still a relatively new and underexposed art form in the Netherlands. This takes place every second Wednesday of the month in the Dynamo youth center. The ballroom scene is an originally African and Latin American LGBTQ+ scene in which competitions are held in art forms such as dance, drag and catwalk. The jury is full of praise for the commitment and ambition of the young initiative.

Café Wilhelmina

In addition to being a pub, Café Wilhelmina is also an independent stage and meeting place where many events are organized. The café has been a household name in Eindhoven for years in the blues and rock scene. Café Wilhelmina also offers a rehearsal space for choirs.

Money amount

The winners received an award and cash worth 7,500 euros. The culture prize is awarded every year to an artist or institution that has delivered an achievement in the field of culture that is of exceptional added value to the city.

 

Source: Studio040

For Eindhoven News: Lila Mehrez

GLOW unleashed again !

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Fans of GLOW can indulge again. The light festival kicked off to great acclaim past weekend. This time, the artworks can be admired not only in Eindhoven, but also in Geldrop-Mierlo, Best, Waalre and Oirschot. “It’s just enjoyable with all those colours, lights and music,” says the artist.

For the occasion, parks, squares and buildings have been transformed into works of art. There are 24 to admire on the five-kilometre route through downtown Eindhoven. According to one visitor, it takes some searching. “You walk with the crowd. It’s a pity it’s not better marked, but you get there in the end.”

Saturday night was not only the kick-off of GLOW, but also the opening of the carnival season. That was obviously priority number one for the carnival revellers, but even that group couldn’t resist taking a look anyway. “I am choosing Elluf Elluf today, but next week I will come back and check out GLOW. I’m so curious about the rest.”

Those who intend to visit the light festival too can do so until next Saturday. This year, the lights do not go out at 10pm, but at 11pm.

Source: Studio040.nl

Translated by: Anitha Sevugan

New meeting point Eindhoven News: at Student Hotel Eindhoven

The Student Hotel Eindhoven will be a place where you can meet Eindhoven News. Last week they have reached an agreement, so weekly on Mondays from 16:00h to 18:00h you will be able to find members of the Eindhoven News team in cafe The Pool.

This open meetup is for volunteers of Eindhoven News to get to know each other, it is also for anybody who likes to meet Eindhoven News. If you have something to share (news, experience, event, story) or if you like to know what is happening in Eindhoven, you can just walk in and you’ll find them downstairs in the open and spacious design cafe The Pool. They like to connect with you as (new) Eindhoven citizen.

Both organisations benefit from this arrangement: the online newspaper has a beautiful working and meeting space and can use the meeting rooms when necessary. The hotel will get good exposure for their events, can publish about things happening and about new developments, in the (international) community of greater Eindhoven.

Fanny van den Dries, the new manager of The Student Hotel says: “we are more than a place to stay, we do rent rooms yes, but we also organise events, we have a great restaurant, a nice coffee bar in the centre of town. We like The Student Hotel to be a location where local and international people gather. This cooperation fits our prospective.”

Eindhoven News is an online newspaper, they don’t have a fixed office space. All the team members do work from home or from flexible working spaces. To meet each other they use different locations, for example in the Hub, at the Library or at Seats2Meet. The advantage of this way of working is that the reporters and writers are in the places where it happens.

According to Irene Martens, manager of Eindhoven News: “if we need to work quietly we stay at home, but when working outside we like to be where people walk in and out, where we meet new people and where we hear what is going on in town. There is always something new to tell from people we meet, always a great story to write from where we are. There is so much happening in Eindhoven, we like to be in the middle of it. We are a kind of crowd-sourcing newspaper, Your News is Our News. We co-create.”

“The good thing about being in the Student Hotel is that there is a mixture of local and international people. This way the visitors mix and mingle, learn from each other and start doing things together,” adds Irene.

Fanny became the new manager of The Student Hotel last April, she is happy with the cooperation because working with meaningful organisations perfectly fits TSH’s mission: “to create boundary-blurring spaces where students, travelers, mobile professionals, creative nomads and enterprising minds can connect and thrive in smart design co-living and co-working spaces”. This is where this collaboration is about.

Traditional Carnaval kick off is on, but smaller than usual

After long deliberation, a decision has been made: the traditional Carnaval kick off event ‘3 Uurkes Vurraf’ (three hours in advance) will continue this year, with an audience. But there are fewer people at the start of Carnaval where dozens of artists perform.

“This year we opt for an unadulterated, modest party in Eindhoven”.

“We’re not going for the traditional ‘3 Uurkes Vurraf’ (three hours in advance) with three thousand people in a tent and a large stage,” says Arthur Marres from Omroep Brabant Event Productions. “That is unfortunately one step too far because of the many corona infections. But we are very happy that we can still kick off Carnaval in the purest way. That way, we have the best of both worlds.

Actually, everyone assumed that the ‘3 Uurkes Vurraf’ would be cast in a digital format, just like last year, with a home audience. “That audience is still there,” says Arthur. “They turn their living room into a cosy pub and watch the broadcast cheerfully dressed up. The home celebrants can be seen behind the stage via a fifteen-metre LED wall.”

“So some lucky people can actually be there.”

“The response to follow the Carnaval spectacle digitally has been massive,” says Arthur. “We have received three thousand registrations. Some lucky people can actually be there and we are giving those tickets away via radio, TV and internet. We are currently calculating exactly how many revellers will be able to attend.”

The artists are also very happy to be able to perform in front of an audience again. “It is, of course, very difficult for a Carnaval artist to stand in front of a bare room, while normally you are welcomed by a frenzied crowd in a steaming marquee.”

“When the number of infections skyrocketed, we thought, this is never going to happen.”

For a long time, it was very uncertain: will ‘3 Uurkes’ go ahead or not? “It was a rollercoaster”, the event manager recalls. “On 11 November, we decided that the party would be held in a tent on Stadhuisplein in Eindhoven, and three days later the omikron variant surfaced, which called everything into question. In December, the number of infections skyrocketed and we were heading for a lockdown again. Then we thought: this is never going to work.”

“And when we finally heard that it might go ahead, after all, it was very exciting whether we could get it all sorted out in time to put on such a large-scale event.”

The fact that the party can now go ahead really touches Arthur. “It is the best day of the year for me. ‘3 Uurkes’ is so much fun. I wake up in the morning in a jubilant mood, put on my outfit and in the car on my way to Eindhoven I put on some loud Carnaval music, singing along at the top of my lungs. The smile on my face couldn’t be bigger.

Source: Omroepbrabant

Translation by: Simge Taşdemir

 

 

 

Professor Bert Meijer wins the Van ‘t Hoff medal 2022

The medal is awarded once every ten years for outstanding and groundbreaking work in the field of chemistry, excluding biochemistry. Bert Meijer is the second recipient ever. The prize was first awarded in 2011. 

”I am very honoured.”-Bert Meijer

Meijer happily shares “I see it as a wonderful appreciation for the research that the many students, PhD students and postdocs in our group have carried out over the decades.”

Meijer receives the prize because he has been working on stereochemistry for many years. He introduced the chemical form, which made him world-renowned. Stereochemistry is the study of the spatial structure of compounds and molecules and the consequences of how substances react to each other. With this contribution, Meijer more than met the criteria to receive the medal. The winner’s work must therefore be excellent and groundbreaking.

Rightful winner

According to the jury chairman Wybren Jan Buma. ”Meijer is regarded worldwide as one of the founders in his field. His work has pioneered the mechanisms underlying chemical self-assembly. He has shown that these materials offer unique opportunities to successfully develop solutions.”

Medal

The medal is named after the Dutch chemist JH van ‘t Hoff. The Dutch chemist won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1901. The first winner of this award, Ben Feringa, went on to win a Nobel Prize in 2016.  As a result of the pandemic, the ceremony took place a year later than planned.

Six get-togethers with Seamus Heaney’s poems

The Volksuniversiteit regio Eindhoven offers a poetry course these first few months of the new year. The sessions run for six Wednesdays. The first already starts on 18 January, so you will need to sign up soon.

Greta Timmers (1952), who runs the course, has been an educator all her working life, the larger part of which she spent at the International School of Eindhoven (ISE), teaching English language, literature and theory of knowledge at the pre-university level. Recently retired, she misses the exchange of ideas that literature can bring, as well as the connection with people from diverse backgrounds and with diverse experiences.

She offers courses in poetry since most poems can be read and discussed in the time available – a practical reason – but also because there is such a range of possible approaches; poems connect through their authors, their times, their genre, their themes, their voices -the possibilities are legion. The keyword for this course is enjoyment. Shared enjoyment.

If we winter this one out, we can summer anywhere' — The Estate of Seamus  Heaney

Heaney

In this course, you will discover how Nobel prize-winning Irish poet Heaney uses language and images to (re)create experience. Although no two readers read the same poem, you will see how his poetry can speak across space and time because it touches on experiences we all share. In Heaney’s case, these are family roots, being rooted, a sense of place and individual and national culture and history.

“…between clear blue and cloud/between haystack and sunset sky/between oak tree and slated roof/I had my existence. I was there./ Me in the place and the place in me.” 

Because you will examine very carefully how Heaney uses language and how his language depends on context to be fully understood, this is a course for those who enjoy sharing ideas about poetry, as well as for those who welcome an opportunity to strengthen or extend their command of English.

Come as you are

This is a standalone course; there is no expectation of prior knowledge or homework, although opportunities to read further will be suggested.

Days: Wednesday evenings starting 18 January. For a full lists of dates, check the site of the Volksuniversiteit.

Time: 19:00 to 21:00 hrs.

If you like to register for the course, please click here.

 

At 107 years old, Hinke is the oldest in Eindhoven: ‘A lot of sports and staying busy’

The liberation of Eindhoven, the construction of the Evoluon and the establishment of the Drents Dorp. The average resident has heard of these from the history books, but Hinke Klaver-De Vries has experienced them all. At 107 years old, she is the oldest resident of the city.

“Work out a lot and stay busy,” she sums up her secret to a long life. It was not always an easy life. In 1930 she moved with her parents from Leeuwarden to Eindhoven. Her father had got a job at Philips. However, there was one condition: one of the children also had to work in the factory. So it happened that Hinke was already working in the light bulb factory on Emmasingel at the age of 14.

Child labor

She had to measure the contact points of the light bulbs. A seemingly simple task, but the bar was set high. “We as newcomers had to do 7,000 a day, while the experienced employees didn’t even reach 6,000. Just child labour,” she sighs.

Eight years later, her working life came to a temporary end. She married her beloved Jan Klaver. In those days getting married meant she had to stop working. However, sitting still was and is not something for the oldest inhabitant of Eindhoven. In the years that followed, Hinke became a handball instructor and gave swimming lessons. In her own words, she taught ‘half of Eindhoven’ to swim.

Royal award 

It wasn’t until she was in her late eighties that she decided to slow down in physical sports, as the 107-year-old had now discovered games on the tablet. With Wordfeud, online scrabble, she still shows her granddaughters ‘a tough match’. “It’s a pity that she still beats us, but we wish her success,” says granddaughter Janine Jongepier with a smile.

Hinke is not only successful in mind sports. Now in nursing home Peppelrode, Hinke can look back on a successful life as well, receiving a royal decoration for her efforts as a swimming teacher in 1996.

 

Source: Studio040

For Eindhoven News: Lila Mehrez

Royal opening for renovated TU/e building Neuron

The Tu/E building, formerly known as the Laplace building, was completely stripped. On Tuesday afternoon, the building was reopened by Prince Constantijn with the new name Neuron. The university’s artificial intelligence institute (EAISI) is moving into the building.

In addition to the royal opening, a symposium was held on the themes of artificial intelligence and brain sciences. Earlier, a nine-metre-high artwork by Hella Jongerius was also unveiled in Neuron.

In the new buidling there are also many new meeting and study spaces for students. In total, there are 14 small lecture halls, 22 workspaces and 400 individual study places.

Before, the place that was named after the restaurant business of the same name that occupied it (La Place), the faculty of Industrial Design was housed in the building for a long time. In September 2021, it was announced that the building would undergo a major renovation. A year and a half later, the building was completely gutted inside and rebuilt. This is a little later than planned; the building was originally scheduled to be completed in September 2022.

Source: Studio040

Translated by: Bob

Large flea market in the IJssportcentrum

Bargain hunting in the IJssportcentrum Eindhoven. The ice rink in the Genneper Parken will turn into a flea market this month. Hundreds of stalls fill the rink.

Furniture, special paintings, toys and clothing. There is something for all ages at the Eindhoven flea market. It is also possible to rent a booth yourself.

Stalls

The stalls can be visited all day on Sunday 11 June in the IJssportcentrum. Adults pay €3.50 entrance. Children up to and including 12 years old can enter for free.

 

Source: Studio040

For Eindhoven News: Lila Mehrez

Partners

Eindhoven News is working together with SamenUitAgenda.nl which is a platform where you can find all sorts of interesting events. The nice and special thing is that you can get in touch with people before the event or after.

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