How do we want to live? What kind of place do we need to live and work? What are alternatives to the dominant forms of ownership and the market-driven housing policy at a time when space is becoming increasingly scarce and expensive, and citizens are being pushed out of their homes? What role can art play in this? FGA invites you to look back and ahead.
In February 2021, FGA’s Nienke Terpsma and Robert Hamelijnck began broadcasting the weekly show ‘Shelter for Daydreams’ on Radio WORM, bringing together archival research, oral histories and reports from housing protests around the Netherlands. In 2021, they presented a selection of their recordings on cooperative housing projects and proposals as part of the exhibition ‘Rotterdam Cultural Histories #19: Homes for People Not for Profit’ at TENT Rotterdam. In this Radio WORM podcast series, we bring together a wider selection of the back-catalogue for you to dive into, tranand just in time for the 2022 municipal elections.
FGA is a magazine and editorial art project for field research into art and culture’s local conditions. Artists, editors and free-style researchers Robert Hamelijnck and Nienke Terpsma are interested in oral histories, counterculture, self-organisation and Do It Together, or DIT. In earlier publications, they explored the Swiss tradition of housing cooperatives as a form of living and working together; and examined why artists in various European countries are leaving the city. These publications inspired their current research in their home city of Rotterdam, where, despite the current 2015 Housing Act and the Rotterdam Cooperative Housing Action Plan of 2019, collective and self-organised forms of housing are not gaining ground.
The regular radio show can be heard every Friday 17-18u, check www.worm.org for the current radio schedule and www.mixcloud.com/radiowormrotterdam for more radio highlights. Check here for more about FGA, and here for Rotterdam Cultural Histories #19.
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How do we want to live? What kind of place do we need to live and work? What are alternatives to the dominant forms of ownership and the market-driven housing policy at a time when space is becoming increasingly scarce and expensive, and citizens are being pushed out of their homes? What role can art play in this? FGA invites you to look back and ahead.
In February 2021, FGA’s Nienke Terpsma and Robert Hamelijnck began broadcasting the weekly show ‘Shelter for Daydreams’ on Radio WORM, bringing together archival research, oral histories and reports from housing protests around the Netherlands. In 2021, they presented a selection of their recordings on cooperative housing projects and proposals as part of the exhibition ‘Rotterdam Cultural Histories #19: Homes for People Not for Profit’ at TENT Rotterdam. In this Radio WORM podcast series, we bring together a wider selection of the back-catalogue for you to dive into, tranand just in time for the 2022 municipal elections.
FGA is a magazine and editorial art project for field research into art and culture’s local conditions. Artists, editors and free-style researchers Robert Hamelijnck and Nienke Terpsma are interested in oral histories, counterculture, self-organisation and Do It Together, or DIT. In earlier publications, they explored the Swiss tradition of housing cooperatives as a form of living and working together; and examined why artists in various European countries are leaving the city. These publications inspired their current research in their home city of Rotterdam, where, despite the current 2015 Housing Act and the Rotterdam Cooperative Housing Action Plan of 2019, collective and self-organised forms of housing are not gaining ground.
The regular radio show can be heard every Friday 17-18u, check www.worm.org for the current radio schedule and www.mixcloud.com/radiowormrotterdam for more radio highlights. Check here for more about FGA, and here for Rotterdam Cultural Histories #19.
How do we want to live? What kind of place do we need to live and work? What are alternatives to the dominant forms of ownership and the market-driven housing policy at a time when space is becoming increasingly scarce and expensive, and citizens are being pushed out of their homes? What role can art play in this? FGA invites you to look back and ahead.
In February 2021, FGA’s Nienke Terpsma and Robert Hamelijnck began broadcasting the weekly show ‘Shelter for Daydreams’ on Radio WORM, bringing together archival research, oral histories and reports from housing protests around the Netherlands. In 2021, they presented a selection of their recordings on cooperative housing projects and proposals as part of the exhibition ‘Rotterdam Cultural Histories #19: Homes for People Not for Profit’ at TENT Rotterdam. In this Radio WORM podcast series, we bring together a wider selection of the back-catalogue for you to dive into, tranand just in time for the 2022 municipal elections.
FGA is a magazine and editorial art project for field research into art and culture’s local conditions. Artists, editors and free-style researchers Robert Hamelijnck and Nienke Terpsma are interested in oral histories, counterculture, self-organisation and Do It Together, or DIT. In earlier publications, they explored the Swiss tradition of housing cooperatives as a form of living and working together; and examined why artists in various European countries are leaving the city. These publications inspired their current research in their home city of Rotterdam, where, despite the current 2015 Housing Act and the Rotterdam Cooperative Housing Action Plan of 2019, collective and self-organised forms of housing are not gaining ground.
The regular radio show can be heard every Friday 17-18u, check www.worm.org for the current radio schedule and www.mixcloud.com/radiowormrotterdam for more radio highlights. Check here for more about FGA, and here for Rotterdam Cultural Histories #19.