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Introducing –
Pil and Galia Kollectiv,
one sixth of Mute's
ensemble music column

covering sonic adventures
across genres and time.
Email: info AT kollectiv.co.uk

Mute music column


No Room to Move
nils norman

No Room to Move: Radical Art and the Regenerate City
A fistful of research on the state of critical public art in the maelstrom of New Labour's regeneration programmes.
By Josephine Berry Slater and Anthony Iles


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Amsterdam Wildside OpenPublishing | News & Analysis
Submitted by pauline on Thursday, 2 November, 2006 - 15:01

Pauline van Mourik Broekman

To generate a visual accompaniment to Merijn Oudenampsen's recent piece 'Extreme Makeover', I decided to upload these images – made in the summer when visiting a friend in IJburg, one of the new 'polder' territories emerging adjacent to Amsterdam. In addition to the various existing neighbourhoods being annexed to the creative city project, these new architectural oases are literally being conjured out of the sea...

The pictures show a selection of the sequentially planned zones as they gradually fill up. Some are projected to accommodate a mix of residential and business, some social housing and 'lower cost' residential, others categorised such that plot owners have complete freedom over what they build. There's undeniably a Wild West/frontier spirit in the air – with the so-called 'hardships' (of having no streets, shops and ATMs, for example) perceived as later being rewarded in the form of stellar house price increases and all the usual speculation based bullshit. Looking at a self-declared community being built at such breakneck speed, myriad subtle and not so subtle processes are immediately visible. Some of these are similar to those associated with existing construction and development models: the gated community, the riverside/marina appartment complex, the public-private partnership with a percentage of social housing, a new financial hub – a la Docklands. Others feel more peculiarly 'Dutch' and are broadly to do with the way in which we unrepentently demand 'normal' behaviour whilst proudly insisting on our openness to difference/originality. More dramatically, some reflect the current national crisis over multiculturalism. As far as I know the primary mode of transport between 'mainland' Amsterdam and this city within a city is a metro – one that travels partly underwater meaning access to and from the land is easily managed/monitored. I don't know whether the inhabitant whose house I found most remarkable uses it, but I imagined her/him on it every night, escaping back home... This is pictured in the first two photos: over the front and garage doors two especially cast cement porticos say, 'Where MANY people are. Must be more AIR. Breathe.'

Portico Where There Are Many People

Portico Has To Be More Air. Breathe.

A Child's Drawing

No Streets

Wild West

Waterside Living

Serial Diversity

Homesteading

Making New York

Houses Built out of Straw

Waiting for a Neighbour

Front Garden

Wild Flowers

The Beach

Way Out


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July 2004

Far removed from the clichéd image of the ‘ivory tower’, today’s universities have been opened to the harsh realities of neoliberal economics. In the name of democratisation and equality, the university has become a cross between a supermarket and a factory whose consumers are also its hyper-exploited labour force. But the conditions of mass intellectuality also create new potentials and alliances

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