‘Old cartoons sketch a time of protest and democratisation’
The Illustratum exhibition displays a selection of old cartoons that have been published in the independent university newspaper Quod Novum, the predecessor of Erasmus Magazine. This exhibition was officially opened on Thursday afternoon.
During the move of the magazine, EM editorial assistant and illustrator Esther Dijkstra, found the drawings in a box. “When I saw the illustrations, I thought, ‘Wow, this is a gold mine’.”
This exhibition shows that you can also bring news and debate with illustrations, says Wieneke Gunneweg, EM editor-in-chief. The drawings are from the seventies, eighties and nineties and sketch the spirit of the times. “Especially in the seventies and eighties, there were a lot of protests and it was also the start of the democratisation of the university,” says Gunneweg. “So, you can see clearly that the atmosphere back then was very different from now.”
Artist Luuk Bode finds the illustrations extraordinary. “Even the smallest drawings have beautiful details. It requires a lot of concentration and focus to make them.”
Watch the opening video here:
De redactie
-
Lana van der MeerEditor
-
Alp GasimovCameraman/Video Editor
Latest news
-
Why the university is closed this Friday, while almost everyone else works or goes to school
Gepubliceerd op:-
Campus
-
-
International students pleased with Erasmus University
Gepubliceerd op:-
Campus
-
Internationalisation
-
-
Bottlenecks in higher education funding: will they change?
Gepubliceerd op:-
Education
-
Comments
Comments are closed.
Read more in Video
-
EM TV newsflash: 300k art donation, Shell cancelled, and female PhD’s experience inappropriate behaviour
Gepubliceerd op:Article type: Video-
EM TV
-
-
How to become a Rotterdammert: Defne cheers for Sparta at Het Kasteel
Gepubliceerd op:Article type: Video-
EM TV
-
-
EM TV newsflash: GroenLinks-PvdA wins municipal elections, student in city council and the beadle retires
Gepubliceerd op:Article type: Video-
EM TV
-