Difference between revisions of "The New Rotterdam Folk Story"

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author: Aron Dijkstra
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Author: Aron Dijkstra
  
 
'''With the coming of modern technology like mobile phones and social media, many people at the beginning of the twenty-first century have argued that “the story is dead” in western society. Books are being read less and less, and fewer children and teenagers have the capability to listen to someone talking for more than 30 minutes. Tribes and their oral traditions are almost entirely extinct. Still, we tell each other stories, in different forms, adapted to a new pace and with brand new - but also well-known, even old fashioned- means. Designers and artists can tell stories in ways that fit our modern, supersaturated society. The project The New Rotterdam Folk Story tries to do so with an online collection of stories celebrating the culture diversity of the city of Rotterdam.'''
 
'''With the coming of modern technology like mobile phones and social media, many people at the beginning of the twenty-first century have argued that “the story is dead” in western society. Books are being read less and less, and fewer children and teenagers have the capability to listen to someone talking for more than 30 minutes. Tribes and their oral traditions are almost entirely extinct. Still, we tell each other stories, in different forms, adapted to a new pace and with brand new - but also well-known, even old fashioned- means. Designers and artists can tell stories in ways that fit our modern, supersaturated society. The project The New Rotterdam Folk Story tries to do so with an online collection of stories celebrating the culture diversity of the city of Rotterdam.'''

Revision as of 09:18, 7 July 2016

Author: Aron Dijkstra

With the coming of modern technology like mobile phones and social media, many people at the beginning of the twenty-first century have argued that “the story is dead” in western society. Books are being read less and less, and fewer children and teenagers have the capability to listen to someone talking for more than 30 minutes. Tribes and their oral traditions are almost entirely extinct. Still, we tell each other stories, in different forms, adapted to a new pace and with brand new - but also well-known, even old fashioned- means. Designers and artists can tell stories in ways that fit our modern, supersaturated society. The project The New Rotterdam Folk Story tries to do so with an online collection of stories celebrating the culture diversity of the city of Rotterdam.

The New Rotterdam Folk Story is a collection of personal stories from individuals from all over Rotterdam, visualised for an on and offline platform, as short graphic novels. These short visualisations re-tell the old fashioned oral day-to-day stories in a way that suits our modern society, so that it reaches more people and reminds us of the importance of the personal story.

Storytelling is as old as the human species. In his book “On The Origins of Stories” (2010) literary expert Brian Boyd describes how telling stories made prehistoric humans different from its apelike-cousins. The human species are considered to have survived the long and dangerous evolutionary path from apes to cognitive beings by becoming magnificently social animals. We developed skills to hunt and scavenge in groups, to establish hierarchies and to express our feelings. But the secret weapon of our social skill pack, that what makes us human, is our instinctive power to understand and construct representation. Ancient cave paintings from the Ice Age are well-known examples of an early human urge to express ideas about their surroundings and their place in it, by granting certain collective values and concepts to objects and two-dimensional shapes. Boyd argues that humans are uniquely evolved to communicate through representation, in language and in pictures. In other words: humans communicate through storytelling.

Not only do we tell stories, we are even better in recognising them. In a 1944 experiment, Fritz Heider and Marianne Simmel showed students a simple silent movie, and asked them to write down what they had seen afterwards. The film consisted only of two triangular shapes and one circle moving about the screen around a partially opened rectangle. Yet, instead of describing the factual movement of geometric shapes, all of the students - except one - came up with elaborate storylines. Look up the experiment and see what you come up with yourself.

Modern society is supersaturated with stories. You might not even realise it, but nowadays we are confronted with storytelling almost every minute. Most of us are connected 24/7 to media like Facebook, Twitter, Whatsapp, Skype, Instagram and a variety of news feeds. And how many times a day are you confronted with adverts? Now most of these “stories” would make lousy bedtime stories, but they are stories nonetheless. So what’s the point of storytelling? And how could designers and artists make use of them in this society?

Whether we want it or not, we see stories even in places where none was explicitly intended in the first place, especially in images. Images grant a more direct way of experiencing a story than texts do. We interpret and understand their meaning almost instantaneously. Take for instance the popularity of visual storytelling media like movies, television, documentaries, but also online role-playing games, advertisements and Instagram. This makes me believe that the best way to convey stories is trough pictures, because the audience automatically searches for story in them. This has already given designers and artists lots of opportunities to bring their artwork closer to society, and even to engage with society through their art.

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me drawing in the Kitchen of Het Verhalenhuis

In my opinion, currently our complicated society need designers and artists for social engagement more than ever. In my essay and graduation project The New Rotterdam Folk Story (dutch: Het Nieuwe Rotterdamse Volksverhaal) I describe the culturally diverse city of Rotterdam as an Archipelago City, a city consisting of many cultural and ethnic islands that participate in the same society but almost never mix. Moreover, the more politics try to create a homogenous society, the more these islands tend to isolate themselves. The Archipel City is defined by its diversity. As an illustrator interested in stories I saw the opportunity to get a unique position in between these social islands, and to visualise the stories of individuals from different groups in society. By doing this, I created an interesting collection of visualised personal stories, available for a bigger Rotterdam audience.

A portrait of a Rotterdammer

I collected these stories by drawing a portrait of the individual, or individuals. I did not use a recording device or camera. The making of such a portrait gave me around 20 minutes of quality time with the participant, creating a relaxed and intimate atmosphere that would have been very different if I had used a film of photo camera, because these media are considered very direct. A camera tend to create a distance between artist and subject, whereas a drawing establishes a more intimate connection and therefore creates a more emotionally connected visualisation. With drawings, the viewer does not only experience the representation of the drawing itself, but also the process of making it. I believe this experience is getting lost in photographs because we are so used to having cameras around us all the time.

This effect is also felt in the world of journalism. Nowadays, illustrators are reclaiming a place in pictorial reportage and journalism, which has almost entirely been taken from them by photography in the early twentieth century. Illustrators are now joining journalists in conflict areas to visualise their experiences, or investigating and visualising politics and economy. Why? Images are quick message bearers, they aren't retained by language barriers and they reflect subjectivity; the artist's experiences and the opinion. News nowadays consists of a lot more opinions and experiences than let's say fifty years ago. Moreover, we are getting more and more accustomed to reading images over texts. We are drawn to images because of the importance they have as a message bearers.

In The New Rotterdam Folk Story, I used the portraits as a basis for short Graphic Novels, which I then turned into short video clips. This way I made use of two very recognisable and popular media for storytelling. Also, I knew that these visual translations would be more suitable for sharing in magazines and online. Look at the stories by searching HNRV in vimeo.

So what is the point of storytelling? The most basic answer would be: we simply cannot not do it. It's how we communicate feelings, norms and experiences. In short, the story makes a society, big and culturally diverse. The question if storytelling still serves a purpose as a creator of cohesion in a society is more apt here. It still does, but old fashioned ways of storytelling (i.e. oral) need a little assistance to reach the other cultural "islands". Using contemporary media and pictorial journalism to lift ordinary stories to the plane of folk stories, The New Rotterdam Folk Story supports personal storytelling in exactly that way: making the personal part of society and society part of the personal.

A short picture story based on the portrait and story of a Rotterdammer


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Aron Dijkstra studied Illustration and Cultural Diversity at the WdKA in Rotterdam. The New Rotterdam Folk Story will be shown in Het Verhalenhuis Belvédère, Rotterdam in late Summer 2015. Keep up to date by following the Facebook page of “Het Nieuwe Rotterdamse Volksverhaal”.Keep up to date by following the Facebook page of “Het Nieuwe Rotterdamse Volksverhaal