projects:
mahalas
I can pay for the roses
2024
2023
that one time the
landscape changed
mul-thee-fuhngk-shuh-nl
something foreign
power of breaks
we see us
klei kunst route
2022
wasserette de printer
whats new(s)?
collective embroidery
2021
vrijplaats voor verbeelding
2020
homeescreen
tomorrows language
volkssnakkel
traces
2019
tea mobile
CV
2025
potato pppress / publication
cyclists here / intervention
ev-ri-dee / groupshow
that one time the landscape changed / nomadic program
plamuuur / collective
2024
mahalas / residency
mul-thee-fiuhngk-shuh-nl / interactive installation
screenprinting
2023
claydiner / workshop
power of breaks / residency
something foreign / residency
we see us / text in public space
klei kunst route / public ceramics route
fries forever / public ceramics route
2022
traces / publication
wasserette de printer / laundromat
tomorrows language / public exhibition
stitch and chat / collective embroidery
supermarket art fair / publication
vrijplaats voor verbeelding:
homescreen / online platform
2021
2020
2019
art as a tool / interactive installation
tea mobile / moving installation
cv
// home
Jorien Ketelaar (1998) is participant of daily life, artist, initiator/organiser, publisher/printer, program maker/producer/curator based in, but not limited to, Groningen, NL.
She works with and within everyday situations, questioning expected behaviour and social interactions in shared and sometimes public spaces through interventions, projects and small acts of disobedience. In doing so, she aims to shake up everyday realities to rethink them, question how we act within, and generate new imaginations. She almost always works collectively, both with other artists as well as with those present on site and passing by. Different positions and practices blur constantly, but often some form of printing / publishing is part of it. To describe her practice she likes to say: "i dont make things, i make things happen"
publications
collective wandering
zitten op eigen risico
can you smell the dike?
jorien ketelaar //
small acts of disobedience every day to build moral courage and prepare us for larger acts of resistance