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WHAT’S ON IN AMSTERDAM. ICP ORCHESTRA POSTER BY TIM JOHANNIS AND KRISTINE HYMØLLER INSIDE: AMSTERDAM’S ÜBER-UNDERGROUND ART PONCEY AMBIENT LIGHT JAZZ POP FROM DESTROYER BRIDAL DIARRHEA, ROBO-MULLETS AND CHAMPAGNE CHARLIES WWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL FREE EVERY SECOND THURSDAY POSTER 21 VOLUME 01 24 JUNE-8 JULY

Unfold Amsterdam: Poster 21

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A poster publication inspired by the cultural scene in Amsterdam. Featuring an ICP Orchestra poster, our picks from the underground art scene in Amsterdam, an interview with Dan Bejar of Destroyer and much more.

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WHAT’S ON IN AMSTERDAM.

ICP ORCHESTRA POSTER BY TIM JOHANNIS AND KRISTINE HYMØLLER

INSIDE:AMSTERDAM’S ÜBER-UNDERGROUND ART

PONCEY AMBIENT LIGHT JAZZ POP FROM DESTROYERBRIDAL DIARRHEA, ROBO-MULLETS AND CHAMPAGNE CHARLIES

WWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL FREE EVERY SECOND THURSDAY

POSTER 21 VOLUME 01 24 JUNE-8 JULY

WWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL WHAT’S ON IN AMSTERDAM. WHERE. WHEN. WHY.

music

The evolution of DanBy Russell Joyce

DAN BEJAR’S DESTROYER HAS NEVER BEEN BROKEN BUT HE CAN’T HELP TINKERING

Following the release of Destroyer’s ninth full-length album Kaputt in the midst of last winter, Dan Bejar is finally being asked more about

his primary songwriting outlet than his ongoing involvements in indie ‘supergroups’ The New Pornographers and Swan Lake. And after 15 years of making Destroyer records that veer from outright pop gems to stripped-back MIDI-based confessionals, the California-soft-rock-jazz-lite vibe of his latest offering is, while garnering critical acclaim, no more than simply the next step in the soft-spoken songwriter’s musical adventure. Ahead of his show under the summer stars at Tolhuistuin, he spoke about the new record and his ongoing musical meanderings.

Do you feel there’s a direct evolution in your songwriting, from one record to the next, or is it still about you sitting around a table with a guitar?

Never before has it been less about me sitting around a table with a guitar. In fact, I’m not sure when I last touched a guitar. I think that’s one thread: me steadily walking away from sitting down with an instrument and coming up with chord progressions and vocal melodies to go with those progressions. I’ve almost completely abandoned that mode of working, which was the only way I worked for Thief or Streethawk or This Night.

Was that a conscious decision?No, I mean I’m saying all these things with the real benefit of hindsight. I don’t sit down with the intention of ever writing a song – I don’t really know how. Kaputt was written in a really short period of time via a string of voice memos. I didn’t want to flesh them out at all. If they sounded unfinished, I was determined to let them be, to call it a song anyway, even if it was just two lines that I repeat over and over. I wanted to keep the structure and intimacy of someone muttering into a recording device. That was important. I also didn’t want to sing as much as on previous albums. Sometimes Destroyer songs can sound like a really drunken speech. Which is cool. I’m

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Bois

WWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL 24 JUNE-8 JULY

Skip & DieOn the 15th of every month, international bloggers and publications pick their fave new music from their local scene and share it with the world via the Music Alliance Pact. For June/July Unfold recommends Skip & Die.

This Netherlands-based outfit began as a globally-infused collaboration between South African vocalist/visual artist Cata.Pirata and producer Jori Collignon (also of electronic experimentalists C-Mon & Kypski and Nobody Beats The Drum), although these days they’re a fully-fledged live band. Via their travels through the towns and cities of South Africa, they’ve forged a contemporary and vibrant wall of sound that mixes electro, street organs, hiphop, Afrobeat and South American carnival grooves. While specialising in sexy party bass hits that remind at times of Diplo’s Major Lazer, as new track ‘La Cumbia Dictadura’ demonstrates, there’s always a more considered political side to their art than simply noise and dance. ‘With this song we’re trying to address political, social and environmental entropy,’ explains Cata.Pirata.

Download Music Alliance Pact exclusive ‘La Cumbia Dictadura’ and 35 other tracks at www.unfoldamsterdam.nl/music.

not trying to distance myself from the older records or drunken speeches. I love them. But it’s not really where I’m at these days.

The words have always seemed first-and-foremost to your songs – like you’ve mainly come from a writer’s perspective…Yeah, that’s how I’d work before. I’d write stuff down and parts of it would really lend itself to being in a song. But Kaputt was a big break from that. I guess it was constructed orally. If anything didn’t come with a melody already attached, it was discarded. I certainly wouldn’t try and make a record like this with a group, as it would be a lot to negotiate. With the writing of the album, it all had to come to me at once or it just didn’t get used.

And have you suffered writer’s block at all?I probably haven’t written a song in two years, so it’s interesting you ask… Actually I think I wrote the first song (‘Chinatown’) a couple years ago on the train from Cologne to Amsterdam… But I can’t really do more than one thing at once, so after recording, then playing with the Pornographers, I started wrapping my head around how to tour this record, because in my head it seemed completely untourable. Maybe deep down inside I made it that way because I didn’t want to go on tour. Yet when I asked everyone involved if they wanted to tour, to my surprise they all said yes!

How’s it been touring a record that is untourable?It’s been cool. The shows themselves have been really good. To me Kaputt sounds kind of like a poncey ambient-light-jazz-pop record, but on stage it actually turns into kind of a muscular free-jazz-disco workout. It’s really horn-heavy. The trumpet and the sax really step up. So yeah, it’s fun. And we never got to record the songs as a group so it’s really exciting to be able to pull it off live.

And has that changed the songs themselves?Yeah, the band have really started to take liberties with the songs. The live show is pretty loose – people just play what they feel like and there’s a lot of open-ended songs that just go off. It’s been getting really fuckin’ noisy toward the end, too, which is cool.

Destroyer plays Tolhuistuin, 29 June

highlightsWWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL WHAT’S ON IN AMSTERDAM. WHERE. WHEN. WHY.

SUNDAY 26 JUNEROOTS OPEN AIROosterpark, 13.00, freeBy the time this issue hits the streets, Amster-dam Roots Festival will be well under way. Highlights of the indoor festivities include Club Pera in Paradiso (24 June), with Greek outfit Imam Baïldi providing a global melange of pop and hiphop, plus a Rebel Up! Soundclash special in Tropentheater (25 June). As for the main event in Oosterpark, however, let’s hope the sun blazes a bit brighter than at last year’s gathering. Not to be missed are renowned Benin Afrofunk crew Or-chestre Poly Rythmo de Cotonou; an alternative to traditional Portuguese fado from OqueStrada; and Amsterdam-based collective TenTemPiés, who mix rock, reggae, Latin American grooves and melody-heavy pop. Beyond the tunes, don’t forget the park will be blessed with a glorious array of dining delights. Yip, it’s time to indulge in the most renowned ribs in town.

THURSDAY 30 JUNENICOLAS JAAR BAND (DEKMANTEL)Paradiso (Grote Zaal), 23.30, €19Nicolas Jaar is one of the hottest talents in dance music right now. His music is typically filed under minimal or tech-house, but listening to his live sets you just know this guy is a walking, spinning musical encyclopaedia. From hiphop to Latin, African desert grooves to ethno jazz - Jaar rarely gives in to genre limits. So when he dropped by Trouw in January to launch his debut full-length Space is Only Noise, he spoke to us about his next musical move: forming a band. ‘I want to keep it electronic because I like the textures of electronic music,’ he said. ‘But when it’s tied to organic elements, I find it even more beautiful. So I’m still using computers, triggering loops etc, but there will be a drummer, guitarist and a saxophonist/keyboardist. So you can ex-pect my very electronic rhythms, a drummer that’s very jazzy, then a saxophone solo and a guitar that’s grooving. Hopefully it will sound good.’

AFTER THE RAPTUREOCCII, 20.00, €6It’s a battle of the country concerts this week. At Paradiso Het Parool take over the Grote Zaal for a couple of nights of ‘Country Hitklup’, revisiting

a hoard of country classics with a Dutch pop and rock line-up that has a couple of decent names, but which is otherwise bloated by BN’ers. Instead we’ll stick with this party at OCCII, which costs €24 less and is a suitably dirtier, drunker and more authentic take on the genre. German rednecks Black Diamond Express Train to Hell lead proceedings, promising a whisky-drowned take on country folk. They’re joined by Amster-dam’s own Bad Moon Rising. But where’s Trigger, our fave Amsterdam country covers band? Well, if you’re really curious, there’s a private barn hoedown in a stable on 25 June. If you fancy a line dance drop us an email.

FRIDAY 1 JULYICP ORCHESTRABimhuis, 20.30, €18We don’t often write about jazz here – partly be-cause it’s not easy to find words to describe guys and gals who’ve dedicated their careers to going out and trying something different every night, and partly because of an unashamed saxophobia that permeates the Unfold office. That said, the ICP Orchestra is probably the finest jazz ensemble in the Netherlands. Their sets are nothing short of thrilling, so we’re delighted to be presenting a poster inspired by their work in this issue. The orchestra dates from the ’60s, when pianist Misha Mengelberg and drummer Han Bennink founded the Instant Composers Pool. Decades later these guys are still mainstays in the line-up, which tonight includes such other jazz masters as Michael Moore, Ab Baars, Mary Oliver, Wolter Wierbos and others. The gig also marks the launch of a new ICP-inspired photo book by Ton Mijs, but tonight is all about their extravagant contemporary improvisations, which will sound like nothing you could ever imagine.

NOSAJ THING (KLINCH)Melkweg (Oude Zaal), 23.00, €13 + membershipYoung LA producer Jason Chung was behind one of the most memorable albums of 2010 with his debut Drift. An instrumental collection of avant-hiphop, subtle glitch electronica and swaying bass grooves, he paired the relaxing synth sounds of Boards of Canada with meatier

hiphop- and dubstep-influenced beats. Despite the lack of rhymes that could have slid easily on top, its intelligent structures, weaving analogue melodies and head-nodding low-frequency sweeps proved to be utterly mesmeric.

CAFÉ PARADISOParadiso, 20.00, freeKomkommertijd may have taken on a new mean-ing this summer thanks to E. coli, but there’s no denying things are slowing down around town. Fortunately, as has become tradition in recent years, rather than locking up the PA, Paradiso will open its doors on quiet nights to create a grand café atmosphere. On various evenings through July and August, you can wander in for free and catch big and little bands performing acoustic sessions.

THURSDAY 7 JULY DANCE ME TO THE END ON/OFF LOVEParadiso (Grote Zaal), 21.00, €15When it comes to music for dance performanc-es, Canadian troubadour Leonard Cohen prob-ably isn’t the first name to trip from the tongue, thanks to his reputation for melancholy and dark atmosphere – albeit with an amazing degree of poetic lyricism – but his songs will be the focus of this Julidans event. Danish company Granhoj Danse will bring a ten-piece live band for their festival debut, accompanying the songs with their signature expressive dance moves.

SATURDAY 9 JULYPITCH FESTIVALWestergasfabriek, 13.00, €32.50/€27.50/€50 weekendA new name for the summer festival calendar, Pitch is very much obsessed by the dance sounds of now. Thus heavy bass steppers, modern hiphop makers, cutting-edge sample kings and even purveyors of exotic Euro pop will take to the stage (also on Sunday 10). For the latter, look out for Kakkmaddafakka, who’re four melodic Norwegian boys produced by Kings of Convenience’s Erlend Øye; but you can also expect amazing sets across the weekend from the likes of Crystal Fighters, Rustie, Palmbomen, Floating Points, Hudson Mohawke, Flying Lotus and Cut Chemist.

For more Music visit: www.unfoldamsterdam.nl

highlightsWWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL 24 JUNE-8 JULY

filmNOTABLE NEW RELEASESFROM 23 JUNETHE TRIPThis Brit comedy, starring Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan as amplified versions of themselves, was initially a six-part BBC sitcom, but they’ve dropped more than an hour of material to form this feature. The story follows the two comedi-ans on a restaurant road trip through northern Britain, seeing them consider their middle-aged career status, analysing their love lives and riffing impression after impression as they per-petually try to outdo each other. It partly follows up their 2006 movie A Cock and Bull Story, which set them in a film-within-a-film, although The Trip arguably has more emotional impact to it. It’s also absolutely funny at times, particularly when you know the history of the two. But if you are familiar, why settle for the cinematic cut? (SM)

FROM 29 JUNETRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOONDear Michael Bay, must you continue destroying my childhood? I understand that you like big bangs, and there’s apparently a sufficient audi-ence of teens for you to blow a massive wad of cash on cutting-edge 3D effects that will make our eyes pop out. If only you would borrow my DVD of the original Transformers: The Movie from 1986, with its suitably low-tech animation and heart-tugging storyline (how you’ll weep when Optimus dies). Plus, when the super-mulleted Stan Bush sang, ‘You’ve got the touch, you’ve got the power’, I really believed him. I still do. I don’t believe in you, Bay! And your recent confession that Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen was, in fact, shit doesn’t make it right! (SM)

FROM 7 JULYARRIETTYThe newest Studio Ghibli masterpiece was re-leased in Japan last summer, but it’s taken time for it to filter around the globe due to language dubs. Known internationally as The Borrowers Arrietty, it’s a Tokyo take on the much-loved Mary Norton novel The Borrowers about the Clock family, a group of little people living, in

this case, under the floorboards of a traditional Japanese household, borrowing items from the humans above. That’s until Sho, a grown boy from the house discovers Arrietty and her family, resulting in new adventures and dangers for the group. Repeatedly screened to great demand at Melkweg’s Ghibli festival back in spring, it’s an animated feast for the eyes and an enchanting story for the heart. (SM)

BRIDESMAIDS

If you’ve seen the posters, chances are you’ve decided not to watch this film: five clichéd chick-flick gals – the fat one, the beautiful one, the slutty one… – in ugly pink taffeta pull their best Blue Steel moves, looking more hot than funny. Look a little closer, however, and you’ll see this is written by (and stars) Saturday Night Live’s Kristen Wiig – one of the funniest people around who just happens to be a woman – and produced by Judd Apatow (Knocked Up, The 40-Year-Old Virgin). Things are looking up. The plot’s straightforward enough: bride-to-be Lillian (Maya Rudolph, who manages to be both warm and cuttingly funny) is negotiating her way to the altar with the ‘help’ of best friend and maid of honour Annie (Wiig, hilarious) and a pack of mismatched bridesmaids. Nothing radical there, but great performances, excellent writing and witty improv – not to mention a willingness to cross the borders of good taste (case in point: Lillian squatting in the gutter in a meringue of a wedding dress striken with chronic diarrhea) – take Bridesmaids way beyond your usual (cringe) chick-flick fare. Undoubtedly, women will smile knowingly at some of the female clichés (which have, after all, become clichés because they’re based in a version of the truth) but men will laugh out loud. Highly recommended. (MR)

PINAWim Wenders is back on the scene, and even he’s utilising 3D tech now. Expect a rather dif-ferent pace to Michael Bay, however, seeing as this piece showcases the work of the amazing German choreographer Pina Bausch, who sadly died before its completion. The film comprises four of her works, interspersed with interviews.

SPECIAL SCREENINGS & FESTIVALSOTAKU! / オタクTUESDAY 28 JUNEOT301, 20.30For this edition of the commendable initiative focused on Japanese animated film, you can marvel at the computer-assisted marvels on display in Blood: The Last Vampire, a long short (or a short feature) in which a sullen Japanese schoolgirl turns out to be a crack commando vampire killer with a deadly katana. And then Metropolis, Osamu Tezaku’s take on the seminal black-and-white classic by Fritz Lang, now filled with resplendent colours and sporting characters that look more Disneyesque than your average Otaku is used to. (With English subtitles) (LvH)

HERE’S JACK!FROM THURSDAY 30 JUNEEye Film Instituut Nederland, various timesOl’ Jack Nicholson turned 74 this spring, and while he’s slowed down in recent years, he hasn’t yet settled for a retired life in a secluded country house or even a care home. Thankfully, this two-month run of classic Nicholson films doesn’t have much interest in modern sub-hits such as The Bucket List, but it will lead you from his youth in Hollywood through to Scorsese’s 2006 crime thriller The Departed. Obvious stops include counterculture road movie Easy Rider, the biopic Hoffa, the Stephen King horror The Shining and the femme fatale flick The Postman Always Rings Twice. But perhaps most crucially, the week prior to the launch of this retrospective sees the release of a newly restored print of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Is that enough crazy for ya? (SM)

For more Film visit: www.unfoldamsterdam.nl

By Monte Bergamont

SKIP THE SEASONED MASTERS THIS SUMMER

In summer, most galleries in town take a well-deserved break from unearthing the newest and greatest and fill their white walls with the ubiquitous

‘Summer Group Show’ – which sceptics might argue is the perfect opportunity to offload works they have hanging around. But if you’re still craving something new and exciting, check out the secret world of Amsterdam's underground art spaces (just remember to double check opening hours first).

BERM ATELIERSKrugerplein 36a, bermcollectief.blogspot.com, Open daily 13.00-17.00Founded in 2010 by two Rietveld graduates, BERM is an exciting ‘project space’ addition to the city’s underground gallery scene. The focus is on community and social-minded contemporary art – an important theme among the smaller spaces in town. Workshops, exhibitions, film nights and an artist-in-residency programme are just a sampling of what’s on offer.

DE SERVICE GARAGECruquiusweg 79, www.vriendenvandeservicegarage.nl, Open Wed-Sun 12.00-18.00Originally established in 2007 and now relocated in a

450-square-metre space in Oost, this cultural platform has remained a locals’ favourite due to its continued ability to present an exciting and varied programme, which reflects the depth of creative energy that is present in the city. One of the original ‘project spaces’ (famously at the base of the Post CS building), they showcase local illustrators, designers, photographers and more, and the results are typically exciting, if sometimes a little baffling – in a good way, of course.

GOLEBBurgemeester de Vlugtlaan 125, projectgoleb.wordpress.com, Open by appointmentThis artist-run work-and-living space in Bos en Lommer (Amsterdam’s newest art-buzz neighbourhood?) provides studios for nine in-house artists, an artist-in-residency programme and a 70-square-metre project space to accommodate exhibitions, screenings, lectures and general unbound experimentation. It’s very international and very multidisciplinary, offering music, performance and video art. Themes often veer towards activism and emancipation through expres-sion on personal and community levels.

KULTER.Sanderijnstraat 21, www.kulter.nl, Open Thur-Sat 13.00-18.00 (or if the socks are on the Amsterdammertjes)This self-described ‘proeflokaal’ (tasting room) is definitely worth the cycle or tram ride out to Bos en

Delve into art’s underground

art

WWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL WHAT’S ON IN AMSTERDAM. WHERE. WHEN. WHY.

highlights

GRA Graduation Show 2011Wednesday 6 – Sunday 10 JulyOpening: 6 July 16.00-20.00, 7-9 July 11.00-20.00, 10 July 11.00-16.00Gerrit Rietveld Academie, Fred. Roeskestraat 96

Amsterdam’s world-renowned art and design academy has been producing exciting contemporary artists for close to a century now. The collective drive and passion for preparing young talent for the gruelling life of a ‘working artist’ has established its reputation as one of the best places to look for what’s new and fresh in the fast-paced and very competitive art world. The final task of student life at GRA is an exhibition of the work – built, organised and curated by the students themselves. Thus, every July, the academy transforms itself from the usual chaotic hive of wood, paper, metal and wire that threatens to engulf the halls and everything in them, into a slightly more ordered hive of wood, paper, metal and wire that does engulf the halls, classrooms, foyers, fields and parking areas that surround it. With students from all disciplines showing their work throughout the two main buildings and various outbuildings, the carnival atmosphere (they’ve all just graduated after all) is immediate upon arrival. So enjoy the chaos, check out the daily performances and embrace the trustees of the financially threatened Amsterdam art scene.

Lommer. Functioning as both an intimate gallery space that specialises in bridging art with performance, music and words, and as a collective that organises events in collaboration with other artist-run initiatives, Kulter’s true accomplishment is the creation of an accessible, relaxed and homely atmosphere. Enjoy a meal and a discussion with the artists before they’ve gone on to even greater things.

OUTPOSTJan Toroopstraat 35, www.outpost-slotervaart.tk, Open by appointmentThis gallery’s current location in Slotervaart was originally squatted in 2009, borne out of a necessity to provide young artists a place to show their work. Its strength remains its credible contact with those looking to exhibit outside the mainstream circuit. Now more established, the gallery has also started booking artists from outside the Netherlands, as exemplified by its recent show by British artist Craig Barnes.

SCHRANK8Wagenaarstraat 331, schrank8.blogspot.com, Opening times vary with exhibitionIf diversity is what you’re after from a gallery, this little gem is for you. Found in the living room-cum-studio of graphic designer Hansje van Halem, the star of this show (after the art, of course) is a 1930s wood and glass showcase cabinet originally from Germany. Every two months (or thereabouts) its doors open to host works by local artists and designers. Opening parties are usually cosy affairs, with DJs tucked in the corner of the room and a warm meal on the stove in the kitchen. Previous exhibitors include such local luminaries as Bart de Baets, Miek Zwamborn, Michiel Schuurman and Job Wouters.

TETO PROJECTSHaarlemmermeerstraat 89-2, www.tetoprojects.com, Open Fri, Sat 13.00-18.00In October of 2009 this apartment/project space began functioning as a platform for current art and design practices. Spurred on by the need to show young, recent academy graduates, curator Hercules Martins began checking out final exam exhibitions and approaching artists who in someway appealed to him. The programme continues to focus on a process-driven approach to the production, presenta-tion and discussion of art and its practice.

WWW.UNFOLDAMSTERDAM.NL 24 JUNE-8 JULY

featured artist unfold recommendsTim Johannis and Kristine Hymøller

Tim Johannis is a still life photographer and Kristine Hymøller a visual artist with an interest in sculpture and performance. Since 2009 they’ve produced a series of works together, collaborating and combining their talents. This has become the foundation of a new line of photographic works.

www.timjohannis.com www.kristinehymoller.com

You probably know what to do: www.twitter.com/unfoldamsterdam // www.facebook.com/unfold.amsterdam

Win tickets to FeAtUReD conceRts, PARties, FiLMs AnD MoRe: WWW.UnFoLDAMsteRDAM.nL/Win

volkskrantgebouw wibautstraat 150 1091 gr amsterdam

www.unfoldamsterdam.nl

editors: steven mcCarron, russell Joyce Assistant editors: sarah gehrke, livia stier

Business Director: allison Cody Distribution: Patrick van der klugt

Design: russell Joyce Poster: tim Johannis and kristine Hymøller

contributors: monte bergamont, lauren Comiteau, aquil Copier, sarah gehrke, luuk van Huët, steve korver, Johanna nock, megan roberts, natalia sánchez, livia stier, marijn westerlaken.

Printing: Zwaan Printmedia

wHat’s on in amsterdam.

Unfold Amsterdam is printed on 100% recycled, 100% post-consumer waste paper.

No trees were harmed during the making of this publication.

want unfold in your bar, venue, store or business? Please send an email to [email protected].

Poster artistsmake a poster. become a star. send an email to [email protected].

advertisingto advertise in Unfold magazine or on our comprehensive website send an email to [email protected].

free tiCketsfor the chance to win free tickets and other stuff, go to www.unfoldamsterdam.nl/win.

HoW BADLY Do YoU WAnt tHis oR AnY otHeR oF oUR PosteRs UnFoLDeD? eMAiL [email protected]

DetachmeNts, ot301, 24 June

Gay & LesbiaN summertour 2011 (the mouNtaiN), from 24 June, rialto

New members exhibitioN (Ft. martyN F. overweeL), arti et amicitiae, until 10 July

The Haiku Summer Festival Review.A day of my wageto stand in this fucking field.Rain pissing non-stop.

eK 1988, studio k, until 26 June

featured artist unfold recommendsTim Johannis and Kristine Hymøller

Tim Johannis is a still life photographer and Kristine Hymøller a visual artist with an interest in sculpture and performance. Since 2009 they’ve produced a series of works together, collaborating and combining their talents. This has become the foundation of a new line of photographic works.

www.timjohannis.com www.kristinehymoller.com

You probably know what to do: www.twitter.com/unfoldamsterdam // www.facebook.com/unfold.amsterdam

Win tickets to FeAtUReD conceRts, PARties, FiLMs AnD MoRe: WWW.UnFoLDAMsteRDAM.nL/Win

volkskrantgebouw wibautstraat 150 1091 gr amsterdam

www.unfoldamsterdam.nl

editors: steven mcCarron, russell Joyce Assistant editors: sarah gehrke, livia stier

Business Director: allison Cody Distribution: Patrick van der klugt

Design: russell Joyce Poster: tim Johannis and kristine Hymøller

contributors: monte bergamont, lauren Comiteau, aquil Copier, sarah gehrke, luuk van Huët, steve korver, Johanna nock, megan roberts, natalia sánchez, livia stier, marijn westerlaken.

Printing: Zwaan Printmedia

wHat’s on in amsterdam.

Unfold Amsterdam is printed on 100% recycled, 100% post-consumer waste paper.

No trees were harmed during the making of this publication.

want unfold in your bar, venue, store or business? Please send an email to [email protected].

Poster artistsmake a poster. become a star. send an email to [email protected].

advertisingto advertise in Unfold magazine or on our comprehensive website send an email to [email protected].

free tiCketsfor the chance to win free tickets and other stuff, go to www.unfoldamsterdam.nl/win.

HoW BADLY Do YoU WAnt tHis oR AnY otHeR oF oUR PosteRs UnFoLDeD? eMAiL [email protected]

DetachmeNts, ot301, 24 June

Gay & LesbiaN summertour 2011 (the mouNtaiN), from 24 June, rialto

New members exhibitioN (Ft. martyN F. overweeL), arti et amicitiae, until 10 July

The Haiku Summer Festival Review.A day of my wageto stand in this fucking field.Rain pissing non-stop.

eK 1988, studio k, until 26 June

featured artist unfold recommendsTim Johannis and Kristine Hymøller

Tim Johannis is a still life photographer and Kristine Hymøller a visual artist with an interest in sculpture and performance. Since 2009 they’ve produced a series of works together, collaborating and combining their talents. This has become the foundation of a new line of photographic works.

www.timjohannis.com www.kristinehymoller.com

You probably know what to do: www.twitter.com/unfoldamsterdam // www.facebook.com/unfold.amsterdam

Win tickets to FeAtUReD conceRts, PARties, FiLMs AnD MoRe: WWW.UnFoLDAMsteRDAM.nL/Win

volkskrantgebouw wibautstraat 150 1091 gr amsterdam

www.unfoldamsterdam.nl

editors: steven mcCarron, russell Joyce Assistant editors: sarah gehrke, livia stier

Business Director: allison Cody Distribution: Patrick van der klugt

Design: russell Joyce Poster: tim Johannis and kristine Hymøller

contributors: monte bergamont, lauren Comiteau, aquil Copier, sarah gehrke, luuk van Huët, steve korver, Johanna nock, megan roberts, natalia sánchez, livia stier, marijn westerlaken.

Printing: Zwaan Printmedia

wHat’s on in amsterdam.

Unfold Amsterdam is printed on 100% recycled, 100% post-consumer waste paper.

No trees were harmed during the making of this publication.

want unfold in your bar, venue, store or business? Please send an email to [email protected].

Poster artistsmake a poster. become a star. send an email to [email protected].

advertisingto advertise in Unfold magazine or on our comprehensive website send an email to [email protected].

free tiCketsfor the chance to win free tickets and other stuff, go to www.unfoldamsterdam.nl/win.

HoW BADLY Do YoU WAnt tHis oR AnY otHeR oF oUR PosteRs UnFoLDeD? eMAiL [email protected]

DetachmeNts, ot301, 24 June

Gay & LesbiaN summertour 2011 (the mouNtaiN), from 24 June, rialto

New members exhibitioN (Ft. martyN F. overweeL), arti et amicitiae, until 10 July

The Haiku Summer Festival Review.A day of my wageto stand in this fucking field.Rain pissing non-stop.

eK 1988, studio k, until 26 June

featured artist unfold recommendsTim Johannis and Kristine Hymøller

Tim Johannis is a still life photographer and Kristine Hymøller a visual artist with an interest in sculpture and performance. Since 2009 they’ve produced a series of works together, collaborating and combining their talents. This has become the foundation of a new line of photographic works.

www.timjohannis.com www.kristinehymoller.com

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editors: steven mcCarron, russell Joyce Assistant editors: sarah gehrke, livia stier

Business Director: allison Cody Distribution: Patrick van der klugt

Design: russell Joyce Poster: tim Johannis and kristine Hymøller

contributors: monte bergamont, lauren Comiteau, aquil Copier, sarah gehrke, luuk van Huët, steve korver, Johanna nock, megan roberts, natalia sánchez, livia stier, marijn westerlaken.

Printing: Zwaan Printmedia

wHat’s on in amsterdam.

Unfold Amsterdam is printed on 100% recycled, 100% post-consumer waste paper.

No trees were harmed during the making of this publication.

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DetachmeNts, ot301, 24 June

Gay & LesbiaN summertour 2011 (the mouNtaiN), from 24 June, rialto

New members exhibitioN (Ft. martyN F. overweeL), arti et amicitiae, until 10 July

The Haiku Summer Festival Review.A day of my wageto stand in this fucking field.Rain pissing non-stop.

eK 1988, studio k, until 26 June

So that’S that! 21 posters, 4 specials, 1 year of work and a whole lotta love and effort.Stay with us online through summer, or maybe in the park...

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Unfold Amsterdam Poster 21 Volume 1 Tim Johannis and Kristine Hymøller