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The “Shadow Organ”, traveling art installation and one of the nominees for this year’s GLOW Talent Awards, highlights stories about corona time

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Along the route of the Glow light festival, a small organ appears with a projection on the walls of the city behind it. The work is not called ‘Shadow Organ’ for nothing and tells the story of the negative and positive side effects that the corona pandemic has brought with it.

The Shadow Organ is an art installation by artist collective Love for the City and is one of the nominees for this year’s GLOW Talent Awards. The artwork is the last part of a triptych, the first part of which was made in 2020. The corona pandemic is the common thread in the triptych. This year, the focus is on stories about how the pandemic has gotten under people’s skin.

Because even by the end of 2022, the pandemic is not as far away as it sometimes seems. Moreover, many people still struggle with feelings and thoughts that have not been expressed, according to the collective. The artwork must give Eindhoven residents the space to express those thoughts and feelings. By having conversations with residents of the city, the artists have created an image of all the different feelings that live around corona.

That feeling was then visualized by translating the essence of the stories into small templates. The Shadow Organ shines a light on these patterns, so that the stories can be seen on the walls of Eindhoven. In this way, the stories should provide a moment to have a conversation about this topic. “Our artwork should function as a conversation starter. For example, it gives Glow visitors the opportunity to express their feelings.” Isis Boot – Artist of Love for the City.

Love for the City

Before designing the artwork, the makers of the Shadow Organ talked to children, young people and seniors about the lonely and nasty corona period for many – while others experienced the incidentals, such as lockdowns, as pleasant.

Designer Isis Boot highlights one of the most striking stories she has heard in these conversations. “During one of the lockdowns, a grocery delivery person had more time to visit his addresses. This allowed him to have a chat with people who needed that extra. His story is told in the artwork through a series of cars that be projected onto the wall.”

In addition, GLOW visitors can cut and paste a template for their own story and add it to the series of the artwork. That’s how the Shadow Organ is always in motion, that’s the idea. “During the corona time we learned to look at our time differently. It isolated us from the world, but also brought us closer together,” visitor GLOW.

Trilogy

Love for the City started the triptych back in 2020 with the artwork “Separated not isolated”. They had several Eindhoven residents make models of their own living rooms during lockdown for that artwork. Together, these models formed a hotel of stories in isolation. It had to provide a connection between city residents during the lonely time.

Last year, the artist collective created a work of art under the motto “The City of Light Laughs”, an installation in which laughter, from smiling to roaring laughter, was exhibited, because laughter ‘is a virus that can be spread’, according to the collective. Here, too, connection was the goal.

 

Source: Studio040

For Eindhoven News: Lila Mehrez

Glow is back with its yearly light art festival

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It has become a tradition for many visitors: walking the Glow light art route in November. This weekend it was once again busy in the Eindhoven city centre. The light artworks are appreciated by many. “The colours, the music… it’s beautiful.

The event has grown from 45,000 visitors during the first edition of GLOW in 2006, to a record number of more than 750,000 visitors during the 2019 pre-Covid edition. As a result, GLOW Eindhoven is now one of the top five most visited light festivals in the world.

A five-kilometre route meanders past 33 light artworks by students and designers. Small installations in almost invisible places alternate with huge projections on the most famous buildings in the city. The route runs through the station to the Catharinakerk and past the Van Abbemuseum.

Audio tour

Light is a sign of hope, wonder and connection. The theme, Urban Skin, was chosen to highlight this collaboration and connection between art and Eindhoven. The artworks change the appearance of the city center in Eindhoven. Something new this year, which reinforces this motivation, is the audio tour . Artists tell the story behind their work in their own, often humorous, way. This reduces the distance between art and viewer.

Energy saving

Due to the energy crisis, the event will dim the lights an hour earlier from Monday to Thursday. There will also be two light installations on the Anne Frankplantsoen that are completely CO2 neutral. The organisors are doing everything possible to make the event as sustainable as possible. They also expect the cooperation and help of their visitors.

‘If everyone who comes to see the works of art turns off one light at home, we can together ensure an energy-neutral event.’

Suzanne Maas, project manager GLOW

The light festival will be on until Saturday, 19th November.

Source: Studio040

Translated and edited by: Louise

Free tickets to the Chineke orchestra premiering at the MuziekGebouw

The exclamation mark behind its name is there for a reason: Chineke! Orchestra’s motto is “change and diversity in classical music”. Orchestra’s members are all top musicians from ethnic minority groups based in Great Britain en Europe. And they are premiering at the MuziekGebouw Eindhoven on 21 November. 

The name Chineke! means “God, creator of all things good”. And indeed, this orchestra brings together a lot of good things: big ideals, a drive to innovate, courage and top quality. Chineke! Orchestra was founded in 2015 by double-bass player Chi-chi Nwanoku and is part of the Chineke! Foundation that supports young musicians. The orchestra made its debut in the Royal Albert Hall during the BBC Proms in 2017 and has been successful ever since, performing in large venues throughout England and beyond, including the Rotterdam Doelen and the Amsterdam Concertgebouw. On 21 November, Chineke!’s performance will also include Dvorak’s famous Symphony no. 9.

Before the program, an interactive discussion on Diversity & Inclusivity will be held in the main hall, starting at 19h30. Classical Music Programmer Jeroen Smits will discuss this topic with Chi-chi Nwanoku, founder of the Chineke! Orchestra, and journalist Stephan Sanders, whose book ‘From exclusive to inclusive’ will be published in November. 

Free tickets!

Ten Eindhoven News readers can get free tickets to the Chineke! orchestra at the Muziekgebouw Eindhoven.The discount code is chinen, and the booking link is http://mgehv.nl/chineke. For more information about the orchestra, please click here. We would love it if you could share pictures or share your experience on our social media pages. In case, you have trouble with the booking link or code, please write to tickets@mgehv.nl or eindhovennews@gmail.com.

For Eindhoven News: Beena Arunraj

Building up Glow in full swing

In Eindhoven city centre, construction work is in full swing on the light installations for Glow in various places. The light festival starts next Saturday evening.

At the Market and the Anne Frankplatsoen, among other places, staff are busy building up for the festival. There, you can already see the contours of the installations that will light up the coming week.

Works of art

This year, 33 works of art can be seen during the light festival, by students, designers and companies, among others. Small installations are interspersed with huge projections on well-known buildings in the city.

As in 2019, the route runs via the railway station to the Catharinakerk and past the Van Abbemuseum. This year, the lights go out an hour earlier, due to the energy crisis.

Source: Stuio040

Translated by: Simge Taşdemir

 

Here2work, a hybrid international job fair- November 14-17

Are you an international looking for a job in the Netherlands? Join the second edition of the Here2work International Job Fair this November 14-17. This hybrid event is held both online and in Amsterdam and invites internationals based in the Netherlands to enhance their careers.

“free passes for Eindhoven news readers”.

Here2work (H2W) is an initiative led by the NL Alumni Network – Netherlands and 7days2go representing a growing community of over 8,000 international students and graduates residing in the Netherlands and +70,000 around the globe. H2W supports and promotes international talent by hosting the second edition of the job fair dedicated to international professionals looking to kick-start their careers in the Netherlands.

HR professionals, company representatives, international career coaches and mentors will join the event to share their insights with the attendees during the four-day program.
In this event, the participants will be able to meet internationally oriented businesses and
organisations while getting access to simultaneous 1-1 mentoring, webinars, Q&As, and
speed networking sessions.

Free passes

At the job fair, you would rub shoulders with the c-suite executives, Coaches, HR professionals and companies and besides, it’s available at the convenience of your home. Above all, Eindhoven News is giving away fifty free passes to its readers to the virtual job fair. You can find here the free explore passes. If you wish to attend the fair in Amsterdam or if the free tickets have run out, then you can benefit from a 20% discount on all passes.

The program focuses on the following categories: Land, Work, Integrate and Connect.

Land

Learn how life and work in the Netherlands are for internationals looking to take their career to the next level. 

Work

Explore the Dutch labour market as a highly skilled migrant within a vibrant and multicultural environment at the most strategic location in Europe.

Integrate

Get to know Dutch culture and the more than 200 nationalities present in the Netherlands and your future workspace!

Connect

Meet your future employer and international experts with insights and tips on how to find a job in the Netherlands.

Strategically located at Europe’s front door, the Netherlands provides access to 95% of
Europe’s most lucrative consumer markets are within 24 hours of Amsterdam or Rotterdam. Ranked No. 1 on DHL’s Global Connectedness dex, the Netherlands has a competitive international climate and is home to 15,000 foreign companies. Thus, looking at the Here2work job fair schedule, speakers and attending organisations, it’s a no-brainer that the event would increase the workforce of the Netherlands.

 



Due to poor organisation, no permit was applied for Highland Games

At the Highland Games in Geldrop, where a death occurred on 7 August due to a stray metal ball, too little attention was paid to the formal side of organising the event. Partly for this reason, no one applied for a permit. So concludes research agency COT, which investigated the circumstances of the incident.

According to the investigators, the Highland Games should have been classified as an event requiring an official permit. The fact that this did not happen is also due to the inadequate information on the municipal website. This leaves too much room for organisers to judge at their own discretion whether an event needs a permit or not, according to the researchers.

In addition, the report concludes, the organisers focused mainly on ‘practical matters’. This suggests that no one within the organisation was concerned with matters such as permit applications.

Municipality not to blame
Geldrop-Mierlo is not to blame, the investigators conclude. After all, the municipality was not the organiser of the event. Officials who knew about the event did not have a role in applying for permits.

With that, the responsibility around applying for permits lies entirely with the organisers. In the absence of a permit application, the municipality did not have the opportunity to perform a monitoring role. To actively monitor potential events that need to be controlled is not the responsibility of a municipality, the researchers believe.

Clarify
COT advises the Municipality of Geldrop-Mierlo to make it clearer when an event does or does not require a permit. In addition, the municipality should evaluate the permit process annually with event organisers.

A script should also be drawn up so that event initiators do not forget or skip any steps when applying for permits. The Municipality of Geldrop-Mierlo has announced that it will adopt the recommendations.

Source: Studio040

Translated by: Bob

Sinterklaas celebrations in the city centre

Sinterklaas will visit Eindhoven again this year. The ‘goedheiligman’ (good saint) and his attendants called ‘Pieten’ can be seen on the 18 Septemberplein on November 12th. Mayor Jeroen Dijsselbloem will welcome the distinguished guest to our city. Many excited children will no doubt be there to cheer when he arrives. Sinterklaas and company will arrive at 13.00. 

The programme includes a performance by Mikey and Megan, and there is a surprise act on the square. Then, at 14:45, Sinterklaas will ride through the centre on his horse Ozosnel. During that trip, there will be a stopover at the Van Piere bookshop, where a poem for the Good Saint will be recited.

After a procession through the city centre, Sinterklaas arrives at the Heuvel around 15:45. For this occasion, the shopping centre has been transformed into a true ‘Pietjes’ paradise.

Children can enjoy face painting, crafts and cake decorations, play games and of course sing and wave to the Saint. The activities are credited with stamps and a full set of stamps is rewarded with a Pietendiploma.

At around 16.30, Sinterklaas says goodbye and leaves with the Pieten to his residence.

Source:Studio040

Translated by: Seetha

Best percussionists to Eindhoven for tournament with €15,000 prize money

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The battle between the world’s best young percussionists will erupt in Eindhoven on 10 November. From fifteen countries, musicians will travel to the Muziekgebouw and the Effenaar to show their percussion skills at the international music competition – TROMP. The winner walks away with 15,000 Euro.

To do so, the participants must first pass two preliminary rounds and a semi-final. On Sunday 20 November, it will be decided who is the best percussionist. In the final, the soloists and ensemble have to play together with a video projected on a big screen. This piece was written by Dutch Canadian composer Trevor Grahl. Whoever does it best can look forward to a cash prize of 15,000 Euros.

Festival
Apart from a competition, a festival will take place at the same time. That programme starts on 12 November with a performance by the band ‘Jungle by Night’. A day later, there is a family concert, where visitors can play along themselves. Five days later, there is a competition between Dutch composition students.

The international music competition lasts until 20 November. See the site for the whole programme.

 

 

Source: https://studio040.nl/nieuws/artikel/eindhoven-wereldtoneel-voor-slagwerk

Translated by Simge Taşdemir

Record number of visitors for preHistorisch Dorp

The preHistorisch Dorp (prehistoric village) in Eindhoven received a record number of visitors last season. The counter came to a total of 72,000 guests.

That is an increase of forty per cent over last year. Although 2021 was a corona year, even then the preHistorisch Dorp as an open-air museum did not have to complain about visitor numbers.

Crowd pullers
Especially for the anniversary year, there were themes from different periods of history. Yvonne Lammers of the museum looks back. “The big crowd pullers were Heksia, the event for witches, and Vikingfest. That archaeology is alive and that there is a lot of interest in it was evident from the reactions of visitors after their visit to the new ArcheoFactory”.

Source: Studio040

Translated by: Bob

Halloween and horror in the Distelstraat

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Little witches, monsters on stilts and plenty of candy. These are the ingredients for the spooky Halloween night in Eindhoven’s Distelstraat this weekend. Hundreds of dressed-up children came from all over the Kruidenbuurt neighbourhood to have a look.

The party is popular. You can tell by the many visitors who stopped by this year. Big clown heads, witch circles and cobwebs lit up the street and houses.

Terrifying

Screams and howls ring out from the speakers of houses where sweets lie on the tables and dressed-up residents sit waiting for the children. Together, it creates a spooky atmosphere that is still just a little too scary for some young children.

Local residents keep a watchful eye and make sure the tour is fun for everyone. Children fill their bags and buckets with sweets or they run through the haunted house for the fourth time.

Socialising

The residents have spent weeks dreaming up and creating outfits and decorations. They especially enjoy being together. “We have just moved here, and get in touch with the neighbourhood easily through parties like this,” explains resident Kim Obbens. The organisation plans to involve more streets in the neighbourhood event in the coming years.

Source: Studio040.nl

Translated by: Anitha Sevugan

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