ROTTERDAM.- In three different episodes, Melly TV opens up the learnings of the institutional name change. It asks how vulnerability is necessary for change. It investigates how the name change is connected to educational reform. And it recognizes and celebrates ongoing processes of change. With talk-shows, neighborhood guests, and commissioned artworks for the screen, Melly TV is presented in partnership with Open Rotterdam and developed with consulting partners Lilith Magazine and Brand New Guys.
The new visual identity for
Kunstinstituut Melly is the outcome of the institutions annual Work-Learn Project (WLP). This third edition of the WLP was developed in collaboration with the Dutch design academy, Werkplaats Typografie (Arnhem) of ArtEZ University of the Arts, and Wkshps (Berlin and New York), a multidisciplinary design workshop. Six graphic designers Callum Dean, Wooesok Jang, Nina Schouten, Alexander Tanazefti, Emily Turner, Yan Zhihan came to work and learn with Armand Mevis and Anniek Brattinga from Werkplaats Typografie, Prem Krishnamurthy from Wkshps, and the team at Kunstinstituut Melly.
Kunstinstituut Mellys Background
In 2017, a group of cultural practitioners publicly challenged the name of the institution formerly known as Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art with an Open Letter. Their letter was triggered by artist Wendelin van Oldenborghs Cinema Olanda: Platform presented at the institution that year. Both the letter and such project made clear the need for an urgent historical awareness, the needs of an increasingly multi-vocal society, and the pressing concern of systemic racism. In response, the institution vowed to change its name. On September 30, 2020, the name Kunstinstituut Melly was chosen on the basis of its capacity for maintaining accountability and responsiveness towards social narratives, and to continue the process of becoming a more welcoming and daring cultural institutionactively challenging racism in both the present and the pastinto the future.
Kunstinstituut Melly is one of the few cultural institutions in the world to have launched a multi-faceted, formal name change initiative. Using the need to respond to the de-colonial movement as an aggregator for deep institutional transformation, a starting point was to question the role of contemporary art within society. As a result, contemporary art, collective learning, and public engagement lie at the heart of all their activities.
The name Melly originally refers to the artwork Melly Shum Hates Her Job (1990) by Canadian artist Ken Lum, permanently installed on the buildings façade since 1990. Melly has come to signify not only the image of a female, working-class anti-hero, but also a new relationship between the institution, the street, the city, and the communities that it is part of. This name was chosen as a bold, unique name that maintains the memory of the renaming process and the community-led transformation that the institution has undertaken.