Press Announcement The Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund A new art fund has been established in The Netherlands, created to help artists realise ambitious productions. Projects realised with the Funds’ support will be acquired by the Hartwig Art Foundation and donated to the Dutch National art collection. Encou raging experimentation and creativity at the highest level, the Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund creates a framework and holds the funding for an annual series of new artworks, collaborating with artists to help them realise ambitious production id eas. Upon production, the artworks will be donated to the national art collection through the Hartwig Art Foundation, thus contributing permanently to Dutch and international society. Ingrid van Engelshoven, Minister of Education, Culture and Science, The Netherlands said: “Fantastic that the Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund is coming! Thanks to the efforts of the Hartwig Art Foundation, this artistic project supports young artists in actually shaping their creative ideas and innovative projects. T his is badly needed in these times. In addition, it is important that their works of art are preserved for the Netherlands through donation to the Dutch state .” Image: Hartwig Art Fund curators, 2020 - 21 special project year, from left to right then top to bottom: Sharmyn Cruz Rivera, Aude Christel Mgba, Rita Ouédraogo, Iris Ferrer, Jo - Lene Ong For its inaugural year, the Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund proposes a special project that will run over the course of 2020 - 2021 and will respond to the critical moment artists and institutions are working in now. To emphasise the importance of post academic programmes and residency organisations for artists and curators in The Netherlands, highlighting their enormous contribution to a culturally vibrant society, the Fund is inviting their alumni to define the parameters of the 2020/21 project. The Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten Amsterdam (which celebrates in 2020 its 150th year), the Jan van Eyck Academie (Maastricht), De Ateliers and If I Can’t Dance, I Don’t Want To Be Part Of Your Revolution (both based in Amsterdam), BAK basis voor actu ele kunst (Utrecht) and CBK Zuid Oost/AIR residency (Bijlmer) and Tent (Rotterdam), all of whom work with artists, are invited to nominate a long - list of 35 artists who have attended their programs. A group of small and mid - size institutions across the country will receive support to present newly completed works by the participating artists in 2021. The institution formerly known as Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art (Rotterdam), the Vleeshal (Middelburg), Casco Art Institute (Utrecht), Stroom Den Haag and Oude Kerk (Amsterdam) have committed to presentations in the second half of 2021. De Appel and Framer Framed – both of which actively promote an emerging and diverse group of curators – hav e nominated five curators, Sharmyn Cruz Rivera, Iris Ferrer, Aude Christel Mgba, Jo - Lene Ong and Rita Ou é draogo , who will be employed by the Hartwig Art Foundation as the curatorial team for this project. Together with the presenting partners the curators will determine the criteria, guidelines and process of selecting 15 participating artists from the long - list. This final group of 15 artists will be invited to participate in the 2020/21 project, with at least one artist represented from each nominating i nstitution in the final list. The curators will support and collaborate with the artists from the moment of their selection to the presentations of their work: “ We are looking forward to the great responsibility and honour of curating an acquisition of c ontemporary artworks for the Dutch national colle c tion. We are also delighted to be working closely with artists and some of the most forward - thinking cultural institutions in the Netherlands. Together, we aim to rethink and reevaluate what relevant but ov erlooked narratives and artistic approaches are and how they can be made visible through this project.” The 2020 - 2021 budget is 600,000 euros. Each artist will receive an honorarium of 10,000 euros to enable the continuation of their practice; 300,000 eur os has been assigned to acquire newly produced works by the selected artists, and – i n line with the Funds future ac t ivities – these works will then be donated to the Rijkscollectie and thus to the Dutch State. Editors' Notes: Hartwig Art Production | Co llection Fund The Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund believes in the contribution that the arts make to civic society and to the common good. Furthermore, the Fund believes in the importance of building and sustaining cultural heritage and in the st rengthening of social awareness and identity through a shared national collection. By donating in this way to the State collection, the Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund is working to build upon and enrich our existing common heritage and also to encourage an active role and discussion concerning civic ownership, collection building and care taking for art. Artists working in all disciplines and of any generation are eligible for the Fund: from the visual arts (painting, sculpture, installation a nd drawing) to time - based art disciplines (performance, film, video) and works in the digital and public space. The Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund is managed and overseen by The Hartwig Art Foundation , also established in 2020. The Hartwig Art F oundation has pledged an initial amount of 10 million euros to the Hartwig Art Production | Collection Fund to ensure its activities for the long - term. From the end of 2020 onwards the Fund will appoint a Commissioning Board which will be responsible annua lly for defining the process of nominating and selecting the artists. The Commissioning Board will be composed of art experts and representatives of national and international institutions, in order to ensure productions are anchored in the concept of the ‘Collectie Nederland’ (the Dutch National State Collection) and also to establish the projects, artists and artworks internationally. Each year, up to five productions will be selected and realised. Neither the Fund nor the Foundation will have any control over the processes of nominating and selecting artists, nor will they have any control over the artists’ productions. Each Commissioning Board will be appointed for a three - year term. For more information, please contact: Noepy Testa & Rhiannon Pickles press@hartwigartfoundation.nl www.hartwigartfoundation.nl Appendix 2020 - 2021 Special Project Curator biographies Sharmyn Cruz Rivera is a Puerto Rican curator and writer now based in Amsterdam. Her research departs from meditations on human geography, radical manifestations of identity, and methodologies of collaboration. Most recently, Cruz Rivera served as Project Manager at Volume Ga llery and as Associate Curator at The Green Lantern Press based at Sector 2337 in Chicago. Cruz Rivera holds an MA in arts administration and policy from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a dual BA in art history and modern languages from the University of Puerto Rico. She was a participant of the 2019 - 2020 Curatorial Programme at de Appel. Sharmyn has been a resident at OxBow School of Art and Artists’ Residency (Saugatuck, MI), Summer Forum for Inquiry + Exchange (Kaneohe, HI), Roots and Cult ure (Chicago, IL), ACRE (Steuben, WI) all in the United States. She was the recipient of the Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation Curatorial Fellowship. She is the co - editor of This may or may not be a true story or a lesson in resistance , a de Appel pub lication due to launch in the fall of 2020. Iris Ferrer is a freelance cultural practitioner from Manila, Philippines and now living in Amsterdam. She was recently part of the 2019 - 2020 de Appel Curatorial Program and is the 2020 - 2021 de Appel Curatorial Research Fellow. She has worked as a writer, researcher, project manager and curator across the field of contemporary visual arts and alongside Philippine and regional - based platforms and collaborators. In her involvement with the largely - independent infra structure of artistic communities such as Back to Square Juan , she developed strategies for cultural production, community engagement and collaborative curatorial work. Her involvement in attempts to renegotiate the position of VIVA ExCon , the longest runn ing artist - led biennale in the wider Philippines art world, led her to the position of managing curator for its 2018 edition. Her work revisits Philippine cultural histories by enacting new approaches to archiving and exhibition - making, she has also assist ed in providing discursive platforms across the region. Aude Christel Mgba is an independent curator and art historian based between the Netherlands and Cameroon. She was a participant of the De Appel 2018/19 curatorial Programme. In 2017, Aude worked as an assistant curator for the SUD2017, an international triennial of art in the public space, organized by doual'art, a center for contemporary art, for the city of Douala. She is a member of the Madrassa Collective, a group of eight curators from Africa, M iddle East and Europe. She is co - curator of sonsbeek20 - >24 exhibition, an international exhibition in the city of Arnhem under the Artistic direction of Bonaventure Soh Bejeng Ndikung. Aude is a nominee of the fifth edition 2020 - 2021 of Forecast - Mentorship s for Audacious Minds in Berlin; Her project proposal is mentored by Koyo Kouoh. She is also invited curator to ARTEZ Studium Generale Studies on the Future of Art School from September 2020 until February 2021. Jo - Lene Ong is an independent curator worki ng from Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She got her start in the field at the intersection of arts and social activism in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Her interests are in deploying non - western epistemic paradigms and more embodied ways of knowing as modes of exten ding boundaries. Jo - Lene is co - curator of visual arts and theory at Other Futures, a multidisciplinary festival for science fiction and speculative visions of the world. She teaches at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, Amsterdam and recently co - edited Practice Space a volume around locally embedded art initiatives. Jo - Lene was awarded the de Appel Curatorial Research Fellowship 2018 - 19 after completing their Curatorial Programme 2017 - 2018. Recent exhibitions include Unpacking the 3Package Deal (2020) for Amster dam Fonds voor de Kunst; Elsewheres Within Here (2019) at Framer Framed, Amsterdam; SUNSHOWER: Contemporary Art from Southeast Asia from 1980s - Now (2017) at the National Art Centre, Tokyo and Mori Art Museum, Tokyo. Rita Ou é draogo lives and works in Am sterdam. As a curator, writer, Research and Community programmer, her work is informed by her interest in African diaspora, decolonizing institutions, institutional racism, popular culture and social issues. Ou é draogo has worked on several community based projects based around museum collections and is informed by her ongoing research into questions of Samenwerking en Solidariteit (Collaboration and Solidarity), that explores modes of collaborative practices across power differentials, especially within a de - colonial framework.