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Joseph BeuysFIU-Amsterdam initiert durch Joseph Beuys 1984

| Waldo Bien | Statement | History |

 

HISTORY

Statement for and on behalf of FIUWAC-Triodos History , from Waldo Bien, Founding-Director.

1997, 7th of Jan: Founding of the FlU Art Collection, a Social Sculpture Study Collection.

NOTE: This was the result of a discussion among FlU Amsterdam members, about the need for a world wide and multicultural art collection which should be owned by the entire world population, and which should overcome the barriers we have created through specialisation, and open up an understanding of what is common to our humanity as brotherhood, sisterhood, our human kindness and capacity to create.

All agreed on the need for such a collection, but as is so often the case, there was no finance to help realise the conception. Someone then suggested that the way to get this going was to ask artists for credit for this idea and to request donations. Something unexpected happened. Two of Bien's children were playing on the ground, not far from where the discussion was taking place. It didn't occur to them that they were listening to the conversation, when suddenly they called out "can we give something?" All where surprised and charmed at the same time. Such an offer would dissolve the problem of the founding stone in the collection, in the sense of significance and symbolic value. We were being offered the future generation, not a name from the famous past, and to our astonishment, the children began to make a sculpture from things lying around the studio, which consisted of tree elements. This was followed by donations from our other members, and in a matter of minutes, you might say, the collection had been formed. The artworks were signed in and put aside for later further development of the collection. Other FIUWAC-Triodos History

1997, 7th of Jan: Founding of the FlU Art Collection, a Social Sculpture Study Collection.

NOTE: This was the result of a discussion among FlU Amsterdam members, about the need for a world wide and multicultural art collection which should be owned by the entire world population, and which should overcome the barriers we have created through specialisation, and open up an understanding of what is common to our humanity as brotherhood, sisterhood, our human kindness and capacity to create.

All agreed on the need for such a collection, but as is so often the case, there was no finance to help realise the conception. Someone then suggested that the way to get this going was to ask artists for credit for this idea and to request donations. Something unexpected happened. Two of Bien's children were playing on the ground, not far from where the discussion was taking place. It didn't occur to them that they were listening to the conversation, when suddenly they called out "can we give something?" All where surprised and charmed at the same time. Such an offer would dissolve the problem of the founding stone in the collection, in the sense of significance and symbolic value. We were being offered the future generation, not a name from the famous past, and to our astonishment, the children began to make a sculpture from things lying around the studio, which consisted of tree elements. This was followed by donations from our other members, and in a matter of minutes, you might say, the collection had been formed. The artworks were signed in and put aside for later further development of the collection. Other things FIUWAC-Triodos History

1997, 7th of Jan: Founding of the FlU Art Collection, a Social Sculpture Study Collection.

NOTE: This was the result of a discussion among FlU Amsterdam members, about the need for a world wide and multicultural art collection which should be owned by the entire world population, and which should overcome the barriers we have created through specialisation, and open up an understanding of what is common to our humanity as brotherhood, sisterhood, our human kindness and capacity to create.

All agreed on the need for such a collection, but as is so often the case, there was no finance to help realise the conception. Someone then suggested that the way to get this going was to ask artists for credit for this idea and to request donations. Something unexpected happened. Two of Bien's children were playing on the ground, not far from where the discussion was taking place. It didn't occur to them that they were listening to the conversation, when suddenly they called out "can we give something?" All where surprised and charmed at the same time. Such an offer would dissolve the problem of the founding stone in the collection, in the sense of significance and symbolic value. We were being offered the future generation, not a name from the famous past, and to our astonishment, the children began to make a sculpture from things lying around the studio, which consisted of tree elements. This was followed by donations from our other members, and in a matter of minutes, you might say, the collection had been formed. The artworks were signed in and put aside for later further development of the collection. Other things needed urgent attention.

1998, l0th of Sept: Triodos Bank's General Director Peter Blom and Thomas Steiner visit F.I.U. Amsterdam, the atelier of Waldo Bien, Lauriergracht 123. The visit takes place on suggestion of geomorphologist Michiel Damen. Damen, Bien and Kloppenburg have been friends ever since their first acquaintance in 1980 and co-operate in F.I.U.Amsterdam study-groups. Ever since their student days, Michiel Damen has also been friends with Peter Blom. They also shared mutual interests and collaborated intensively in study-groups, especially the Social Triune meetings that were annually held in Achberg, BRD; a spiritual think-tank, where socio-economical alternatives were sought and where Joseph Beuys introduced his ideas for a 'humane' and environmentally friendly economy and Social Sculpture (publications: F.I.U. Verlag: www.fiu-verlag.com). The meeting in Amsterdam has to do with the upcoming opening of the new Triodos Bank headquarters in Zeist. The bankers are in search of a new and creative idea with spiritual value. Bien gives an overview of the F.I.U. Amsterdam activities of the past years and the international networks, the people who participate and their common ideals. Then the "F.I.U. study collection" founded on January the 7th 1997 pops into his mind, This F.I.U. Study Collection, a Social Sculpture Model, is patiently waiting for further development in the corner of the studio. He introduces the idea of this art collection: collective property of the world's population. Especially the idea of an art collection of "collective property", away from traditional property, evokes sympathy and interest. Moreover, the fundaments have already been laid. Triodos requests that the idea be elaborated in writing. Internal conversations and consultations with artists and other kindred spirits follow, with Senior Counsel Frank Callanan in Dublin, with F.I.U. counsellor Dolf Rueb, Amsterdam, and with the F.l.U lawyer Jürgen Binder in Essen, who worked for Beuys in the past and co-founded 'Unternemen F.I.U.' with him. Conversations with Babeth Mondini VanLoo and Louwrien Wijers, who both worked with Beuys in F.I.U. context; and of course with Walter Hopps, Founding Director of The Menil in Houston (TX), because of his great experience and exceptional heart for the Arts, and with Deborah Grotfeldt co-director with Rick Lowe of Project Row Houses, Houston. (www.projectrowhouses.org) All these ideas and suggestions result in a series of drafted concepts, the "letters from the founding fathers" (F.I.U.archive). The 'F.l.U. study collection' is adapted by Kloppenburg to fit the new global scale and renamed into: FREE INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY 'WORLD ART COLLECTION', FIUWAC.

1999, 1st of April 14.00h: Planned visit from Peter Blom, General Director of Triodos Bank and Thomas Steiner to Bien's exhibition "A HUNGER TO BE LESS SERIOUS", Paviljoens, Almere NL. First personal acquaintance of the Triodos bankers with Jacobus Kloppenburg. NOTE: Bien and Kloppenburg give a tour through the exhibition and during a consecutive elaborate meeting, for which director Lia Gieling cordially offers her desk, the idea of a FREE INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY WORLD ART COLLECTION, FIUWAC, is further discussed. Standing together in front of the artwork "Dutch Masters at work at the end of the 20th Century", a double portrait of Bien and Kloppenburg. While explaining Bien made a gesture with his hands as if he was touching an invisible sculpture. He explains:

Both, Bien and Kloppenburg, are looking straight into the camera. The portraits are installed onto the wall at a slight angle to each other. On the spot where the focusing eyes of the two Dutch Masters now cross, an invisible sculpture is located: the idea for a social sculpture model, the first real "MODERN" art COLLECTION in the world, declared property of the world population: The Free International University World Art Collection, FIUWAC. Bien invited the Triodos Bank to become HOST and PARTNER so together we could make this idea visible to the world (MAKING THE INVISIBLE VISIBLE).

Bien and Kloppenburg are invited to visit the new Triodos head office to form an impression of the spatial possibilities and are requested to elaborate the FIUWAC concept. The opening of the new head office is scheduled for October the 1st.

Bien estimated that the realisation of this idea within the three months left before the opening date would require an estimated budget of $100.000. In the following weeks all this was taken into consideration and then, in a meeting at studio Lauriergracht 123, June 7th, in the presence of Waldo Bien, Patrick Healy, Jacobus Kloppenburg and Marietta de Bruïne, Triodos Bank's Public Relations Manager Thomas Steiner, delivered a written note with the happy news that TRIODOS was accepting the proposed idea and offered its assistance to realise it: The walls in their new building would be available to host artworks, costs for the photographic recording, framing and installation of the artworks would be paid and web presentations created. The construction of a legal framework would be worked out along the road. TRIODOS also offered to open up their network for further support and help to find funding. But, the required budget to get this FIUWAC plane in the air, could not be supplied. Bien requested TRIODOS to give the F.l.U. Amsterdam a $100.000 loan and so supply the embraced initiative with the needed "take off' economy. But this request could not be fulfilled because the demanded guarantees for a regular bank loan were not available. Bien then, in return, changed (in order to find a possible opening for the financial dilemma) the roles and said that, if the bank wasn't able to give a loan to create the needed start-up budget, he would offer TRIODOS an F.l.U. loan for the needed sum of $100.000. This F.l.U. loan to TRIODOS BANK would be running over a period of 25 years against 10% annual interest, and connect TRIODOS with the FIUWAC network and let this most inspiring and spiritual river of artworks flow through their building. The interest of such a loan would deliver a bottom line annual economy of $10.000, far less than what would be needed, but it would create at least the needed spark to start the FIUWAC motor and get up in the air. From this new position as "Artist-Banker", Bien applied common banking demands to the proposed F.l.U. loan to TRIODOS, like; What guarantee could be given that TRIODOS would be able to pay back this loan in 25 years? A question like this from an artist to a bank might raise laughter, but the reality is, that banks sometimes go bankrupt and art never does. Bien suggested that the artists would be willing to also supply the demanded guarantee for this F.I.U. loan to TRIODOS, as a social gesture, by creating a "savings account" but then in the form of artworks, photographs, documents etc, that would all be closely related to the ongoing FIUWAC collection, and would be named Triodos-"F.I.U.tures". These F.l.U.tures would then be handled as official value representing documents; stamped, numbered, registered, then framed and hung on the TRIODOS walls. If, in twenty-five years, the purpose of the F.I.U.tures as guarantee against the original $100.000 F.l.U. loan to TRIODOS would be fulfilled and the loan paid back, the F.I.U.tures could be sold on the market and so generate new economy for future projects. All these proposals were taken back to Zeist to be discussed and ultimately to be accepted by TRIODOS with great enthusiasm; On June 10th, 3.46 p.m. followed the confirmation: The first $10.000 interest was paid. From that very moment on it was constantly rush hour for all those involved.

In Amsterdam Jacobus Kloppenburg, Patrick Healy and Hilarius Hofstede work on the FlU Project. Babeth Mondini vanLoo is invited to become a Boardmember. Kloppenburg makes the visual and conceptual designs, layout and logo, including the usual puns: FUTURES becomes F.l.U.tures, and, because they serve as a guarantee for an F.l.U. loan to the Triodos Bank:, they are named: Triodos F.l.U.tures. A part of Kloppenburg's first designs and drafts of ideas are part of this F.l.U.tures collection and they give a good insight into how the FIUWAC and F.l.U.tures concept originated and relate to one another: 'interlocked', or, to speak with Kloppenburg's own concept: "the connection of different categories". Bien travels to Houston to consult WaIter Hopps and the Grotfeldt's, and to invite other American colleagues to the FIUWAC project. Together with Grotfeldt he first visits Charles Stagg in Vidor, TX: "he'll give us some artworks". That appears to be true and others follow this gesture. (F.I.U.archive) WaIter Hopps offers to sit in on the FIUWAC Advisory Board and on the 25th of June 1999 dictates a 'letter of recommendation' for the FIUWAC: Click here for a dynamic version of this letter.

1999, 1st of Oct: Festive opening of the new Triodos Bank headquarters in Zeist, NL, and the first public presentation of the FIUWAC, the 'Free International University World Art Collection'. The opening was announced to be performed by HRH Prins Claus. Walter Hopps, Director of the FIUWAC advisory board unfortunately couldn't come; he is working on the Rauschenberg retrospective show. Charles Stagg and Deborah and Virgil Grotfeldt have come from Houston. Due to the enormous interest among bank officials it proves to be impossible to invite all participating artists. The FIUWAC is represented by 7 persons. The artworks have been installed with great care by Kloppenburg and Bien, for witch they received compliments.

But for Kloppenburg and Bien there is also another important success:

In a letter to Triodos Gen. Director Peter Blom of 27 October 1998, Bien has proposed to visualise, by way of "public commitment", the policy towards positive world development and environmental awareness of companies such as Triodos, by giving a permanent voice to Flora and Fauna at conference tables, and indeed to consult animal, plant and earth, in spirit, when making decisions. A spiritual self education for members of the board. Triodos has responded positively to this proposal and requests to have the Flora and Fauna chairs installed in the new conference room. The next step is an artistic problem: how, and in what shape?

In a way, the solution already exists: Kloppenburg '1930' has been working on these things for many years. The red blood of animals, hemoglobin, and the green blood of plants, chlorophyll. Hence, a green (flora) chair and a red (fauna) chair, minimal. To communicate the message to the blind, the arms of the chairs are also provided with an inlay in braille, reading the words flora and fauna. During the exchange of thoughts on the subject, it becomes clear that more is needed, more "thinking"-tools in the middle of the conference tables. In Kloppenburg's hundreds of A4 sketchbooks, one can see how these ideas were developed, how they are chiselled from the mass as images, or plastically built up by subtle modelling. Bien and Kloppenburg give expression to the great pleasure produced by their co-operation. It results in the:

F.I.U. BOARD AND CONFERENCE TABLE TOOL KIT,

For all FUTURE oriented Board and Conference Rooms in the WORLD*.

(* If interested, contact F.I.U. Amsterdam , Waldo Bien and friends ).

  Waldo Bien Founding Director, FIUWAC sept.1 1999 / 2006


Info : Waldo Bien, FIU-Amsterdam

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