Exhibition showing the relationship of the Dutch and the water opens at Kunsthal Rotterdam
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Exhibition showing the relationship of the Dutch and the water opens at Kunsthal Rotterdam
Dutch Crown prince Willem-Alexander opens the exhibition Zoet Zout (Sweet Salt) in the museum Kunsthal in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. One hundred and twenty works of art in five themes struggle, covenant, gain, entertainment and myth shows the exhibition the relationship of the Dutch and the water. EPA/MARCEL ANTONISSE.



ROTTERDAM.- Water is the single most defining element of the Dutch identity. The ease with which the Dutch deal with water and their low-lying country is a source of wonder to the rest of the world. With a hundred and twenty artworks, the Kunsthal Rotterdam illustrates the affinity that the people of the Netherlands have with water. Top historical pieces by Old Masters such as Willem Maris and Salomon van Ruysdael are exhibited alongside remarkable works by modern artists including Theo van Doesburg and Edgar Fernhout, and contemporary artists such as Marijke van Warmerdam and Daniëlle Kwaaitaal. This varied selection of artworks provides an insight into the essential role that art plays in our perception of water. Visitors to Sweet&Salt can ‘experience' the Dutch waterland in all its diversity, be they young or old, novice or expert.

Image
The myth of unspoilt Dutch polder landscape is one of grazing cows and wide sweeping views. In ‘Sweet&Salt', the countryside depicted in the photographs of contemporary photographer Han Singels appears to be no different to that in 19th century paintings by Willem Roelofs. In addition to visual art, the exhibition includes iconic media images of events embedded in the Dutch collective memory such as the North Sea Flood of 1953 and the building of the Afsluitdijk (the Ijsselmeer Dam). On the basis of five themes (struggle, alliance, gain, leisure and myth), ‘Sweet&Salt' takes a closer look at various aspects of the Netherlands' relationship with water, from water that must be tamed and which the Dutch have learned to live with, use and enjoy, to water as an element of beauty and spiritual significance.

The ‘Creatable' Landscape
Dikes, the Delta Works and the Afsluitdijk form the necessary protection against the turbulent water in and surrounding the Netherlands. The Dutch landscape seems to be entirely ‘creatable' thanks to constant improvements in technology. The exhibition, together with a book of the same name, clearly illustrates how safety and flood management are increasingly making way for water maintenance and the theme of living in harmony with water. ‘Sweet&Salt' invites the general public, planners and policymakers to take a fresh look at the way in which water and landscapes are portrayed in art, to gain inspiration with regard to the management, maintenance and continually changing structure of the Dutch waterland.

Sweet&Salt is a project that comprises an exhibition in the Kunsthal and a publication of the same name by Tracy Metz and Maartje van den Heuvel, published by NAi publishers. The exhibition has been compiled by guest curator Maartje van den Heuvel, art historian and curator of Special Collections at Leiden University in the Netherlands. The main lenders to this exhibition are the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Heritage, and the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo.










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