Christine de Baan explained

Christine de Baan
Birth Date:10 October 1956
Birth Place:Oxford, England
Parents:Piet de Baan (2-3-1923/13-10-1960), Frances Deane Jones
Nationality:Dutch
Occupation:Art historian,;[1] art
Education:Leiden University ; Willem de Kooning Academy
Known For:Rotterdam Design Award (founding director)
Years Active:Since 1985

Christine de Baan (born 10 October 1956) is a Dutch art curator, policy advisor and director, known for numerous contributions in the field of Dutch Design. She participated in the organisation of the Prix de Rome, the Rotterdamse Kunststichting where she was founding director of the Rotterdam Design Award in 1993, the Fonds BKVB, and the International Architecture Biennal Rotterdam.[2]

Biography

Studies and early career

De Baan studied French at the Leiden University from 1975 to 1977, and architectural design at the Willem de Kooning Academy from 1979 to 1986. In the last year she started working together with the designer Ed Annink.

After her studies in 1987 De Baan, Renny Ramakers and Ed Annink founded the Foundation Products of Imagination, which initiated and organized multiple design projects and publications. In 1989 she created an exhibition in the Jaarbeurs about the 150 year of Dutch railroads and the romances, that had taken place there.[3]

De Baan participated in the organisation of the Prix de Rome from 1990 to early 1993, and edited some of its publications. Early 1993 she joined the Rotterdamse Kunststichting, where she was founding director of the Rotterdam Design Award, which she managed the next six or seven years.[4] [5] [2]

Later career

In the new millennium De Baan joined the Fonds BKVB, later the Mondrian Fund, where she chaired the advisory board of the national funding for art and design for four years. She was program director of the International Architecture Biennal Rotterdam from 2006 to 2008.[2] From 2008 until 2013 she was director of DutchDFA, the Dutch design Dutch Design, Fashion and Architecture.[6] [7]

Afterwards De Baan continued a program director, advisor and/or lecturer nationally and international form Dublin, to Cape Town and Beijing. In Arnhem she was advisor for the Arnhem Fashion Biennale in 2014-15 and directed the Sonsbeek and State of fashion foundation in Arnhem for a year.

Work

Products of Imagination

Around 1985 De Baan had started cooperating with the designer Ed Annink to research the state of the design and young designers in the Netherlands. Ed van Hinte explained:[8]

A similar research in those days had been performed by Renny Ramakers for a series of her articles in de Volkskrant. The three of them decided to join forces to promote the new wave of ideas of those Dutch designer. They started a foundation in 1987, and named it "Products of Imagination," abbreviated POI or P.O.I. Their cooperation resulted in the publication of a book under the same name, and the organization of multiple design exhibitions.[9]

DutchDFA

In 2013 the DutchDFA came to an ending, and its funding tasks merged into the Stimulation fund for the Creative Industry (Stimuleringsfonds voor de Creatieve Industrie).[7]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://rkd.nl/en/explore/artists/440642 Christine de Baan ; female / Dutch ; art historian
  2. Tracy Metz. "Van design via netwerk tot product," NRC Handelsblad. 16 december 2008
  3. Edwin Oden. "Bloeiende liefdes tussen de rails." De Telegraaf, Amsterdam, 1989/03/22, p. 5.
  4. Jaap Huisman, "Synthetisch tapijt rolt dank zij designprijs," De Volkskrant. s-Hertogenbosch, 1995/01/28, p. 9.
  5. Editorial, "KUNST De opwindende ervaring van lopen over lucht," Trouw. Meppel, 1995/02/09 00:00:00, p. 21.
  6. Jacco Hupkens. "Hoe groot is Dutch Design nou eigenlijk?," NRC Handelsblad. 21 oktober 2011.
  7. Daan van Lent. "Toen wij begonnen was er nauwelijks crisis," NRC Handelsblad. 5 April 2013
  8. Ed van Hinte. Ed Annink, Designer, 2002. p. 126
  9. Ivo Weyel, "Ontwerperssalon een netwerk van verrassingen," Het Parool. Amsterdam, 1990/02/28, p. 15.