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Dutch Identity Contemporary Dutch Portrait Photography Anton Corbijn Rineke Dijkstra Hellen van Meene Viviane Sassen

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Expositie

Contemporary Dutch portrait photography has been held in high regard for many years, both in the Netherlands itself and on the international stage. Indeed, photographers like Anton Corbijn and Rineke Dijkstra are even more widely known abroad than in their own country. But what makes Dutch portrait photography so unique? The exhibition entitled "Dutch Identity" in Museum de Fundatie in Zwolle centres on that question with works of 25 prominent contemporary portrait photographers, all from the Netherlands: Danielle van Ark, Blommers&Schumm, Koos Breukel, Joost van den Broek, Ernst Coppejans, Anton Corbijn, Linelle Deunk , Desiree Dolron, Rineke Dijkstra, Charlotte Dumas, Lucia Ganieva, Ringel Goslinga, Pieter Henket, Carli Hermès, Cuny Janssen, Danielle Kwaaitaal, Annaleen Louwes, Hellen van Meene, Vincent Mentzel, Erwin Olaf, Carla van de Puttelaar, Viviane Sassen, Martine Stig, Marie Cécile Thijs and Marcel van der Vlugt.

The contemporary photographic portrait evolves from the Lowlands' centuries-old tradition of portraiture. In times gone by, portraits were commissioned and then painted in the studio. A realistic portrayal of the subject, the sitter, was depicted along with attributes denoting the subject's social status. In this day and age, photographic portraits enjoy many distinctive styles. Not only are photographers able to reproduce reality, they also have the possibility of staging their portraits according to their own concept, often in the form of a series. The traditional photographer has thus evolved into a self-directed artist.

Portraits are all about identity. Not only the identity of the model but also that of the photographer and that of the person viewing the portrait. The photographer attaches his or her own idea to the portrait and communicates via his or her photographs with the viewer. The latter interprets the image from his or her own perspective. The viewer can also identify with a portrait of an animal or of an empty interior because it calls forth an association and can even evoke an emotion. Portraits can mirror reality and appeal to one's imagination. Portraiture as a genre has various sub-genres centring on the portrayal of mankind. In addition to traditional studio portrait photography, social themes are portrayed in journal, documentary, political and street photography. Whilst the purpose of this photography is to record events, the emphasis of staged theatre, glamour and fashion photography lies on aesthetics.

With more than one hundred photographs by 25 top photographers from the Netherlands the Dutch Identity exhibition gives a captivating impression of the state-of-the-art of Dutch photographic portraiture in all its striking diversity. A portrait by Ernst Coppejans shows a homosexual man in West Africa who, by assenting to have his photograph taken, put his life at risk. Pieter Henket photographed actress Willeke van Ammelrooy during a staged police interrogation in which fact and fiction are blurred. For her part, Martine Stig recorded two Kuwaiti sisters dressed in burkas. With their faces completely concealed, can this photograph be classified as a portrait? And in addition to Koos Breukel's impressive official portrait of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima and that of Queen Beatrix by Vincent Mentzel, Charlotte Dumas' portraits of the rescue dogs deployed after the 9/11 terrorist attack in New York can be seen in Zwolle. In an age that virtually everyone has a photo camera at hand in the form of a mobile phone and portraits, selfies or otherwise, are flung without a thought and in massive quantities out into the world via social media, Dutch Identity shows that a photographic portrait can be much more than a random snapshot. The exhibition was organised by Cathinka Huizing and Harriet Stoop-de Meester, joint authors of the book Dutch Identity, Dutch Portrait Photography TODAY that will be published by publishing house De Kunst.

Willeke van Ammelrooy, uit de serie The Wait van fotograaf Pieter Henket.

Dutch Identity: portretfotografie in De Fundatie Zwolle

ZWOLLE - Wat maakt de Nederlandse portretfoto nou zo bijzonder? Die vraag staat centraal tijdens de tentoonstelling Dutch Identity die tussen 16 januari en 17 april 2016 te zien is in Museum De Fundatie.
Nederlandse fotografen als Anton Corbijn en Rineke Dijkstra genieten internationale bekendheid, maar waarom? Het werk van 25 vooraanstaande hedendaagse portretfotografen is te zien.

De diversiteit is opvallend. Een portret door Ernst Coppejans toont een homoseksuele man uit Senegal, die met de toestemming voor de foto zijn leven op het spel zette. Pieter Henket fotografeerde actrice Willeke van Ammelrooy tijdens een geënsceneerd politieverhoor, waarin feit en fictie door elkaar lopen. En naast het indrukwekkende staatsieportret van koning Willem-Alexander en koningin Máxima, door Koos Breukel en dat van Koningin Beatrix door Vincent Mentzel, zijn er in Zwolle portretten te zien die Charlotte Dumas maakte van de reddingshonden die werden ingezet na de terroristische aanval van 9/11 in New York.

In een tijd dat vrijwel iedereen een fotocamera op zak heeft in de vorm van een mobiele telefoon en (zelf)portretten via de social media achteloos en in massale hoeveelheden de wereld in worden geslingerd, toont ‘Dutch Identity’ aan dat een fotoportret veel meer kan zijn dan een willekeurige momentopname.

De tentoonstelling werd samengesteld door Cathinka Huizing en Harriet Stoop-de Meester, tevens auteurs van het boek Dutch Identity, Nederlandse Portretfotografie NU dat verschijnt bij Uitgeverij De Kunst


Joost van den Broek, Roep van de dansbelletjes, 2011


Anton Corbijn, Peter Doig, Trinidad 2011


Charlotte Dumas, Merlyn II, 2011



Danielle van Ark, Everything fell into the right hands #20, 2009-2011, Collectie Foam


Ernst Coppejans, Serie Dans le Milieu, West Afrika 2014


Hellen van Meene, Pool of tears, 2008


Koos Breukel, Koning Willem Alexander en Koningin Maxima, 2013


Vincent Mentzel, Hans Wiegel en Dries van Agt, 1978


Martine Stig, Sisters, 2006



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