Showing posts with label Doual'art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doual'art. Show all posts

Sunday, May 29, 2011

IMAGE REPORT NEW WALK WAYS IN NEW BELL

On Friday 27 May, Kamiel Verschuren, together with Lucas Grandin, finished their days of hard work on the New Walk Ways in New Bell project. A SUD2010 project much appreciated by the people living in New Bell, including the 'chef', who took it upon him to make sure that people will gain more consciousness on how to deal with the garbage, in order to keep the sewer - and the drinking water - from being more and more poluted.

In clean sewers, the water can run freely causing less water to remain in the quarter. As a direct consequence of this less muskito's - causing Malaria - will choose the quarter as their habitat.
A second big advantage of sewers no longer clutted by garbage, is that the dirt and water that is poisened by plastic, will no longer enter the clean water sources during the rain season, when the dirty water starts moving through the streets and enters the clean sources.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

New Walk Ways for New Bell

Next week, Xandra Nibbeling and Kamiel Verschuren accompanied by Lucas Grandin, will travel to Douala to continue working on New Walk Ways for New Bell, Verschuren's work in the township of New Bell, where they will be working with Patrick and his team on these new walkways on the open sewer system. Grandin will also be doing some maintanance on the Jardin Sonore in Bonamouti.

This open system is not only found in this quarter, but throughout the city of Douala. Now that the rain season is approaching, the clugged sewer system will be causing more and more problems, causing polution of the clean drinking water. Read an earlier post on this huge problem here.

The project will not only be of help to the people directly involved (i.e. the inhabitants of the streets where we will work), but is above all intended to create an awareness of one's own responsibility in how to deal with the circumstances in which we live in a way that goes beyond the individual. 
More information on New Walk Ways for New Bell.


Besides working on this project - supported by FondsBKVB -  the Ars&Urbis symposium organized by Doual'art on 24-26 May, will be attended, aiming to look forward to the next Salon Urbain de Douala, to be held in 2013.

Keep an eye on the next post!

Sunday, January 16, 2011

The City of Douala and Water

By Berend van der Lans, Architecture plus

La Nouvelle Liberté by Joseph-Francis Sumégné, 2007

Doual’art plays an exceptional role in the city of Douala, by initiating and stimulating urban interventions by artists and public artwork at several locations at a variety of scales in the city. The non-governmental organization, headed by Princess Marilyn Douala-Bell, Didier Schaub and Paulin Tchuenbou, has influenced the image of Douala through their projects undertaken in the last two decades.

Since 2007, the activities and events undertaken by the organization are knitted together through triennial events. The second ‘Salon Urbaine de Douala’ (SUD2010), took place between 4 and 11 December 2010 and was related to the theme of Douala’s somehow troubled relationship with water.

The origin of the city of Douala is formed by a group of small settlements on the banks of the Wouri estuary, populated with fishermen. The Douala culture is hence strongly related to water, both in myths and customs.

Since the German settlers colonised Cameroon, the areas on the banks of the river were reserved for Europeans and later were fully used for harbour activities. For the people of Douala, direct access to the Wouri was nearly fully cut off, the city now seems to be positioned with its back turned to the river.


The harbour zone is blocking any contact between the city and the Wouri estuary
(image: Mauro Alessandro Lugaresi)


Douala is known as one of the places in the world with the highest amount of annual rain fall. The unplanned sprawl of the city has been frustrating the natural flow of the abundant seasonal streams of water, creating numerous problems in the densely inhabited city. Yearly floods result in destroyed housing, damaged private and public asset and in serious health threads to Douala’s inhabitants. Nonetheless, the abundant availability of water also creates chances.

In 2011 construction works start of a new deepwater port in Kribi. The idea is to shift part of the harbour activities of Douala to Kribi and Limbe, another town close to the ocean. In this way the continuous deepening of the Wouri to Douala for deepwater vessels can be avoided.

This results in challenges as well as threads for the largest and economically most active city of Cameroon. The banks of the Wouri will become accessible for the people of Douala once again, hopefully in such a way that the relationship between the Wouri and the Douala inhabitants is not only present in myths and the yearly Ngondo ceremony, but on a more firm basis.

On the other hand, the harbour offers a great direct and indirect economic driver for a large majority of the population of the Douala region. The shift of harbour activities will threaten the income positions of many families and stimulate them to follow the harbour bound companies. It remains to be seen, what impact this will have on the city. It seems obvious that any new plan for the gained harbour banks should include new economic developments to avoid an increase of poverty in the region.

While above and more issues were discussed during ‘conferences’ at the Doual’art premises, SUD2010 also offered presentations of many artworks, vernissages and performances at other locations in the city.


 Performance by Regina Geoger along the banks of the Wouri river,
attracting many harbor workers

Some of the work which was presented clearly developed a dialogue with the people of Douala, either at large or within specific areas.

At Bonamouti two projects were developed. Le jardin sonore by Lucas Grandin offers a vertical garden where the people of the neighbourhood can retreat and enjoy the sounds created by water drops dripping off the structure. Salifou Lindou, a painter and sculptor living in Bonamouti, created Face à l’Eau, an installation of five panels, offering privacy at a bathing site on the banks of the Wouri for the men of the area. 

Top: Le jardin sonore by Lucas Grandin at Bonamouti
Bottom: Face à l’Eau by Salifou Lindou
(photos from www.doualart.org)

In New Bell, another neighbourhood of the city, one of the oldest areas and with a high density, several artists created food for thought for the inhabitants. Hervé Yamguen developed Les Mots Écrits, a poetic approach for his home neighbourhood by involving 5 rappers into creating songs, of which certain lines were executed as wall sculptures at several spots of the area. The rap songs were performed during SUD2010 and recorded onto the CD Wash mes ways (to be downloaded via the SUD2010 website). Kamiel Verschuren explored a pragmatic approach with New Walk Ways New Bell, by developing timber covers for the open sewers of New Bell, once covered by concrete slabs but since long open. The execution of these covers, only at specific locations, created discussions amongst the inhabitants, that it would be good to also develop covers for the parts which are still open and continue to collect dirt and rubbish, thus blocking the stream and resulting in flooded streets with contaminated water.
Hervé Yamguen explaining one of the wall sculptures of Les Mots Écrits in New Bell

New Walk Ways New Bell by Kamiel Verschuren

The Dutch artist Ties ten Bosch settled for 2 months in Ndogpassi, a more recently developed neighbourhood. Many people living in this area did migrate from villages upcountry. The settlements have a more informal feel but by lack of authority are toughly managed by a chef and a committee of men. Via this communal organisational system, decisions on maintenance of public services are made, but also financial assistance for inhabitants who are in need for some help. Diving in deep by Ties Ten Bosch is rather a story than an art work in situ; he documented his stay in the area via video, bottles of water and images. Meanwhile he challenged his temporary neighbours in developing projects with sometimes smaller, sometimes as larger impact on the liveability of the area. While in full contact with the chef and the committee, he developed street names and signs for the main arteries of the neighbourhood. Daily water samples were showcased as a diary of the stream through the area. The force majeure was the construction of a bridge between Ndogpassi and the neighbouring area on the other side of the stream. Shortly after SUD2010 Ten Bosch returned home. The impact of his work remains to be seen, but the bridge is sturdy enough to survive many years of neglect.
The water bottle diary as part of Diving in deep by Ties ten Bosch in Ndogpassi

In the same area, at a beautiful location around and above a local source forming the heart of Ndogpassi, Philip Aguirre developed Source. The project, basically an amphitheatre following the existing shapes of the landscape, will be executed in 2011, but was presented to the chef, the committee and the neighbourhood with a celebrative ceremony during SUD2010. This ceremony proved that the location forms an excellent stage for similar events.

The presentation of Source by Philip Aguirre at Ndogpassi

Individually the impact of the above and other projects developed under the umbrella of Doual’art are minimal and it remains to be seen if these projects really do result in creating awareness of the people of Douala. On the other hand, taking into account the involvement of the people and the reaction on the projects, the positive, aesthetic but hands-on approach does work catching. It makes it useful to return to Douala on a regular basis. It is to be hoped that many Salons Urbains de Douala will follow.

SUD2010 is organised by Doual’art and supported by ICU art projects.
More info on www.doualart.org.

Underneath, you will find some more images taken by Berend van der Lans during SUD2010.



All well dressed and well registered during the Ngondo ceremony
Doual’art premises

Arrival of palm trunk for palm wine production, part of the full recycling program by 2012 Architects
Ties ten Bosch explains Diving in Deep in Ndogpassi
Intermezzo during the presentation of Source by Philip Aguire

Pont Source by Ties ten Bosch in Ndogpassi

La Colonne Pascale by Pascale Marthine Tayou (bottom left) at a mayor junction in New Bell
Vernissages with work from Boris Nzebo (top) and Alioum Moussa (bottom)

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Le Jardin Sonore de Bonamouti


“An elevated garden growing at the sound of falling water. A water recovery system, a garden contructed with the local biotope, a free social meeting space, an architecture to reflect on the element of water and its cultural and social resonances.” With this words French artist, Lucas Grandin, describes the project Le Jardin Sonore de Bonamouti made within the framework of the Salon Urbain de Douala (SUD), a tri-annual festival for public art designed and organized by Doual’art, center for contemporary art in Douala, Cameroon, in cooperation with ICU art projects.

At each triennial, a theme is selected to provide a framework for the artistic interventions and for this year’s SUD the guiding topic was ‘water’. Having grown from a couple of small villages on the banks of the Wouri river, Douala has always had an important relationship with water. Based on this, Grandin’s Jardin Sonore holds a direct relation to the city’s origins and present conditions : “this structure was made to reveal the why of the city of Douala: a water city where you can’t see or feel the water anywhere. Douala is a city where it rains in one hour what it rains in my country in one year, and where the rain is never recovered. ” Hence, through this structure the artist intends to offer the community a free meeting place in Bonamouti where people can regain conscience of the importance of water in their lives, “to give back Douala its right to water”. This is a space where people can go “to rest with the water’s melody, to smell the flowers, to see the Wouri river and its original mangrove, to feel the wind of nature... a new social area to talk, to plant, to listen, to re-create new inter-generational communication through the garden.”


Read more on Arts Collaboratory.org

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Visiting Program: the visitors


The SUD2010 is approaching rapidly and the list of people who have confirmed their visit to the SUD2010 in Douala, Cameroon, by invitation of Doual’art and ICU art projects is growing. The following people have comfirmed their stay:

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

all about SUD 2010: visiting program Doual’art


9 – 17 June 2010 Rotterdam, Amsterdam, The Hague

The visiting program All about SUD2010 in June 2010 was an effective and enjoyable week of hard work. A lot of meetings and conversations in Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and The Hague brought us steps closer to the realization of the SUD2010.

The week started on Wednesday 9th of June in Brussels where Marilyn and Didier attended the opening of GEO-graphics at BOZAR Brussels, in which Doual’art participated. The following day, after the arrival of Paulin Tchuenbou, Lucas Grandin, Marilyn and Didier in Rotterdam, everybody had the opportunity to settle in, and Ties Ten Bosch – the first Dutch official artist-in-residence to be sent out by the Fonds BKVB to Douala – got to meet his Cameroonian hosts to be. Lucas Grandin, from France, showed his Jardin Sonore Ambulant, which he built earlier in April, a mini-model of the Jardin Sonore he had built in Douala in February 2010.

Friday
On Friday, the actual visits to the various institutions started. First, we visited the Netherlands Architecture Institute (NAI) where we had an inspiring conversation with Fanny Smelik, to be followed by the presentation in TENT., where RAW foundation was invited as a guest speaker because of the possibility to rebuild the pavilion of Doual’art into a residency, in a sustainable way. Christine Eyene – curator and journalist, born in Paris from Cameroonian parents and now living and working in London – was also present. She and other the guests, joined us after the presentation for an informal welcoming diner at B.a.d foundation.

For the presentation in TENT., the people from TENT. had kindly prepared the space for the presentation, and after they had welcomed all visitors and guests, Marilyn presentend Doual’art and the aims of SUD2010. She explained the necessity of the SUD for the city of Douala, and the importance of the theme Water. Also, she introduced all artists that will be taking part in the SUD2010.



The weekend

In the weekend we spent a lot of time working on the SUD; preparing the applications, working on the planning, preparing the visiting program for the SUD2010, et cetera. Besides this serious work, there was time for some ‘fun work’, like visiting 2012 Architects, Jan Jongert and Iris de Kievit, where Christine de Baan (director of Dutch DFA) passed by to join us and meet Marilyn. We also visited the Maasvlakte 1 & 2 and the Rotterdam Waterfront to see the transformation of the Rotterdam riverside from harbor to service economy.



The last days
On Monday, we went to The Hague to visit Hivos and the Embassy of Cameroon. In Rotterdam we visited George Brugmans, director of the International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam (during the Netherlands’ first football match in the World Championship – against Denmark, Cameroon would follow later).
Tuesday 15th of June was reserved for a visit to Amsterdam, with meetings at the Fonds BKVB, the Prins Claus Fund, the Mondriaan foundation, and Raw Foundation.

After the last meeting, everyone went home one by one. Marilyn went first to Paris, Christine to London, Paulin and Didier went directly to Douala, and Lucas to France. On Thursday 17th of June, Kamiel Verschuren of ICU art projects and Ties Ten Bosch left for Douala for the Ars&Urbis 2010 and for Ties’ first part of his residency in Douala.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

11 June: Reception and Presentation Doual’art in TENT. Rotterdam

All about SUD 2010

Friday 11 June, at 5 PM in the auditorium of TENT./Witte de With, center for contemporary art, in Witte de Withstraat 50, Rotterdam.

Doual'art (www.doualart.org)
Doual'art will present the ambitions and projects for the SUD, Salon Urbain de Douala 2010, which is a tri-annual, urban international art manifestation in the quarters of Douala, the biggest port in western Africa. Topic of the SUD is aimed at the search for concrete urban problems and the cooperation between artists, communities, architects, urbanists, writers, designers, and curators. The theme of this year’s SUD is "water in context of the city" which has been the subject of preparatory research over the past three years.

RAW foundation (www.rawprojects.org)
The presentation of Doual'art is followed by a guest presentation by RAW foundation. In a wider collaboration named RAW Studios, the architects Calanne Moroney and Bart-Jan Hooft have been working in South Africa, investigating and experimenting on new ways of building. They will show some of their projects and experiments.

All About SUD was made possible with the support of Fonds BKVB, Mondriaan foundation, and TENT.CBK