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Commissioned Critique

Commissioned Critique is an ongoing series of essays commissioned by the Sandberg Instituut and semi-independently edited by Rosa te Velde and Huib Haye van der Werf. Commissioned authors include: Clare Butcher, Eloise Sweetman, Joseph Noonan-Ganley, Angela M. Bartholomew, Philip Coyne, Ayesha Ghanchi, Yolande van der Heide, Annee Grøtte Viken, Miriam Wistreich, Luiza Prado.

In this series of essays various authors reflect on issues specific to art and design MA programmes, as well as their (neo)liberal infrastructures, taking those of the Sandberg as their main case study.

Art schools today continuously need to prove, quantify, valorise, audit and measure their existence and usefulness, and are under constant threat of regulations and cuts. What does it mean to do an MA in art school today? What kinds of learning conditions could produce a generation of artists, designers and thinkers that can carve out spaces in a very real and uncertain world?

The Sandberg as an MA programme is known for its experimental, non-confirmative nature. The ‘freedom’ within the institution is both celebrated and criticised. This series is an ongoing attempt at encouraging deliberation and debate within the Sandberg, and beyond.

Past
Coordinators/Organizers/Curators

Rosa te Velde
Huib Haye van der Werf

Further information
Formats

Essays

← Commissioned Critique
Blackity Black
Wed
8 Sep
— 18 Sep 2021

Comissioned Critique are delighted to announce a new essay: Blackity Black by Simone Zeefuik. "Five pictures from the moodboard of Blacker Blackness, the temporary course at the Sandberg Instituut in Amsterdam." Download and share!

http://www.comcrit.cc/11-simone-zeefuik/

Before I started writing the play, I committed to three principles:

1. Every scene has to have a solid display of Sisterhood. Even in the scenes that centre around the sharper sides of political campaigns, the ones where there was a certain conflict, there have to be moments where the women on stage display a certain level of care for each other.

2. None of the four lead characters, all to be played by Afro-Dutch actresses, will lash out at each other.

3. There will be no forced accents or other stereotypical markers that truly serve no purpose than to make white people comfortable with, and perhaps even feel they ‘recognize’, alla dat Blackness on stage.

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