Een naakte vrouw spiekt vanachter een wit gordijn naar buiten in een huisje, boompje, beestje omgeving.

Raimond Wouda, 1999

Betondorp

Created by Raimond Wouda in 1999. The artwork is a c-print and displayed at 68 x 88 cm.

A young woman peaks curiously from behind a curtain, disturbing the cat in the windowsill. The architecture of the neighbouring buildings and the car in the background create an almost filmic scene. What’s happening in the street?

Betondorp was made for the Amsterdam-based newspaper Het Parool. It shows the intersection between Duivendrechtselaan 129 and Graanstraat. Betondorp, or ‘Concrete Village’, is a neighbourhood in Amsterdam built according to the principles of the garden city movement. Built in the 1920s, it offered affordable housing mainly constructed from concrete.

Having grown up in a similar neighbourhood in Amsterdam-Noord, namely Tuindorp Oostzaan, Raimond Wouda has been attracted to these small communities throughout his career. In his well-known series Tuindorp Oostzaan, he documented the life and surroundings of his youth.

© Raimond Wouda, courtesy of the Foam Collection

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