Pecha Kucha Amsterdam # 9 at Mediamatic
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Though among this year’s crowd, it seems to have been the architects who were the fewest in number and the least remarkable. The presentations began with Rory Hyde, an Australian fresh out of arch-school whose work and ideas fall squarely in the category of ‘alright, I suppose’. He was followed by the duo of Rogier Klomp and Bart-Jan Kazemier, who used the style of Gang of Four’s ‘Anthrax’ to present the history of Bertelsmann’s media empire.
Next up was the man who stole the show with the longest applause and the loudest laughs, Bernard Bolter. The San Francisco-based artist presented his surreal collages of city landscapes by rapping freestyle to the beat of a djembe drum. I never thought I’d hear anyone rap about Frank Gehry “doing his thing” in Los Angeles and Bilbao. Well, now I have, and it was absolutely hilarious.
Few others came close to being that entertaining. Alex Scordelis of NYC’s Improv Everywhere kept everyone laughing with his scenes of orchestrated urban chaos, though his candid-camera-style clips were nothing most people hadn’t already seen on the Internet.
Long videos that broke with the typical format and a humourless style didn’t go down too well with the audience. Edial, a new media student at the University of Amsterdam singled out Sid Lee’s presentation for criticism. “It was too promotional,” he said with a scowl, “an advert for an advertising agency.
photo: Tanja Baudoin












