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The government of Flanders must rebid Antwerp’s Oosterweel Ring Road link project, says European Commission \4

Get out of the cold and catch a year’s worth of local cinema at the Be Film Festival in Brussels this month \ 15

art & living \ P10

Flanders TOday On hOliday

We’ll be absent from your postbox for the next two weeks, but don’t worry, we’ll be back on 14 January

december 24, 2014 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ rEad morE at www.flandErstoday.Eu currEnt affairs \ P2

Politics \ P4

the oosterweel blues

The government of Flanders must rebid Antwerp’s Oosterweel Ring Road link project, says European Commission \4

BusinEss \ P6

innovation \ P7

belgium on the big screen

Education \ P9

art & living \ P10

Flanders today on holiday

Get out of the cold and catch a year’s worth of local cinema at the Be Film Festival in Brussels this month \?

#362

education \ P9

december 24, 2014 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ rEad morE at www.flandErstoday.Eu currEnt affairs \ P2

Politics \ P4

the oosterweel blues

The government of Flanders must rebid Antwerp’s Oosterweel Ring Road link project, says European Commission \4

BusinEss \ P6

innovation \ P7

belgium on the big screen

Education \ P9

art & living \ P10

Flanders today on holiday

Get out of the cold and catch a year’s worth of local cinema at the Be Film Festival in Brussels this month \?

#361

belgium On The big screen

innovation \ P7

december17,2014 ErkenningsnummerP708816

The OOsTerweel blues

business \ P6

Erkenningsnummer P708816

Politics \ P4

#362

current affairs \ P2

Erkenningsnummer P708816

#362 erkenningsnummer P708816

december 24, 2014 \ newsweekly - € 0,75 \ read more at www.flanderstoday.eu

\newsweekly -€0,75

currEntaffairs\ P2

\rEad morEatwww.flandErstoday.Eu

Politics\P4

cr os si ng bo rd er s

BusinEss\P6

innovation\P7

Education\P9

AuniqueprogrammeinGhent introduceschildrenfrom poorerneighbourhoodstothe joysofhealthyeating

Searchingforafewideas tofillyouragendathis holidayseason?Lookno furtherthanourguide inside \ 11

\9

AdmiraloftheFleet

JamesGambiershakeshands

withJohnQuincyAdams

atthesigningof

theTreatyofGhent

art&living \P10

holiday happenings

Funwith Food

Em pl oy me nt mi ni st er sa re si gn ni g de al st om ak er ec og ni ti on of di pl om as an dw or ki ng ac ro ss th e Be ne ul xa ol te as ei r \6

We’ll be absent from your postbox for the next two weeks, but don’t worry, we’ll be back on 14 January \ 14

inthis1914painting

byFrenchartistAmédée

Forestier

Finding commonground

withthe treatyofghent, thecity playedavital rolein endingthewar of1812 daanBauwens morearticlesbydaan

\flanderstoday.eu

Twohundred yearsago, Ghentwas thesetting forthe signingof anagreement thatbrought toan endthe War of1812 betweenthe USand Britain.A seriesof musical eventswillcommemorate theanniversary.

C

hristmasEve,Ghent, 1814.AnAmerican delegation, ledby futurepresident JohnQuincy Adams,and a Britishdelegation, underthe guidanceof Admiral JamesGambier,walksoutof Ghent’sCarthusianmonastery withatreaty intheirhands thatwillbring peacetoNorth America. Ascommemorations ringout inthe Flemishcity this month,we takealo okats omekey questions.What was

thiswarabout? Whatdidthe treatyguarantee?And why onearthdidth eypickGhent? Thestory startsin 1776,with aphrase everyAmerican knowsbyheart: “Weholdthese truthstobe self-evident, thatallmen arecreatedequal.” Itisthe mostfamousline oftheDeclaration ofIndependence,with which13North Americancolonies announcedtheir breakfrom Britain. TheRevolutionaryWar endedin1783 whenGreatBritain officiallyrecogniseditsc oloniesalongtheAtlantic coastto beanindependent nation–theUnited StatesofAmerica. Butthestrugglefor independencewasn’tover.“The British empireonlyrecognised thestateson paper,”explainsLuc François,professor emeritusof historyat GhentUniver-

sity.“Tradeover seaand fishingrights remainedin Britishhands.At thebeginningof the1800s,the Britisheven imposedaneconomic blockadeonNorth America,killing theyoungnation’seconomy, justtomaintainits griponits formercolonies.” What’smore,during theEuropeanwar againstNapoleon, theBritishneeded experiencedsailors.Britain decidednot torecognisetherig htofBritishsubjects tobecomeUSc itizensand startedtaking British-bornnaturalised Americansbyforceinto theNavy,infuriatingthe Americans. Inthe midstof thesetensions, athird partybecame involved.“TheIndians werenottoo happywiththe expansionistnature oftheir newneighbours,” explainsFrancontinuedonpage5

End of an era

We’ll be absent from your postbox for the next two weeks, but don’t worry, we’ll be back on 14 January \ 14

workers leave ford genk for the last time page 6

© belga

Chaos in the mind

ostend exhibition the sea pays tribute to curator Jan Hoet ian mundell more articles by Ian \ flanderstoday.eu

The death of art curator Jan Hoet last February left a large gap in the Flemish and the international arts scene. In tribute, Ostend has realised his final, unfinished project: a wide-ranging exhibition on the sea.

H

oet made his name in the 1970s and ’80s as director of Ghent’s contemporary art museum. In the 1990s, he engineered the museum’s move to its current home in Citadelpark, when it became the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, or SMAK. In parallel, he built an international career, most notably curating the prestigious Documenta exhibition in Kassel, Germany, in 1992. “Jan Hoet has been one of maybe five or six really important contemporary art directors and curators in Europe from the previous 50 to 60 years,” says Phillip Van den Bossche, director of the Mu.ZEE museum in Ostend. He draws a comparison with the late Harald Szeemann, the Swiss curator credited with redefining the way exhibitions could be conceived and produced. “Just as it’simpossible at the moment to imagine another Harald Szeemann, it’s also impossible to imagine another Jan Hoet,” he says. “In the history of modern and contemporary art, we really needed these

© photo: steven decroos

continued on page 5

End of an era

workers leave ford genk for the last time page 6

© belga

Chaos in the mind ostend exhibition the sea pays tribute to curator Jan Hoet ian mundell more articles by Ian \ flanderstoday.eu

The death of art curator Jan Hoet last February left a large gap in the Flemish and the international arts scene. In tribute, Ostend has realised his final, unfinished project: a wide-ranging exhibition on the sea.

H

oet made his name in the 1970s and ’80s as director of Ghent’s contemporary art museum. In the 1990s, he engineered the museum’s move to its current home in Citadelpark, when it became the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, or SMAK. In parallel, he built an international career, most notably curating the prestigious Documenta exhibition in Kassel, Germany, in 1992. “Jan Hoet has been one of maybe five or six really important contemporary art directors and curators in Europe from the previous 50 to 60 years,” says Phillip Van den Bossche, director of the Mu.ZEE museum in Ostend. He draws a comparison with the late Harald Szeemann, the Swiss curator credited with redefining the way exhibitions could be conceived and produced. “Just as it’s impossible at the moment to imagine another Harald Szeemann, it’s also impossible to imagine another Jan Hoet,” he says. “In the history of modern and contemporary art, we really needed these

© photo: steven decroos

continued on page 5

End of an era workers leave ford genk for the last time page 6

© belga

Chaos in the mind

ostend exhibition the sea pays tribute to curator Jan Hoet ian mundell more articles by Ian \ flanderstoday.eu

The death of art curator Jan Hoet last February left a large gap in the Flemish and the international arts scene. In tribute, Ostend has realised his final, unfinished project: a wide-ranging exhibition on the sea.

H

oet made his name in the 1970s and ’80s as director of Ghent’s contemporary art museum. In the 1990s, he engineered the museum’s move to its current home in Citadelpark, when it became the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, or SMAK. In parallel, he built an international career, most notably curating the prestigious Documenta exhibition in Kassel, Germany, in 1992. “Jan Hoet has been one of maybe five or six really important contemporary art directors and curators in Europe from the previous 50 to 60 years,” says Phillip Van den Bossche, director of the Mu.ZEE museum in Ostend. He draws a comparison with the late Harald Szeemann, the Swiss curator credited with redefining the way exhibitions could be conceived and produced. “Just as it’s impossible at the moment to imagine another Harald Szeemann, it’s also impossible to imagine another Jan Hoet,” he says. “In the history of modern and contemporary art, we really needed these

© photo: steven decroos

continued on page 5


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