Jacquill G. Basdew
About Oostenburg
For our Spring issue, we embarked on a local exploration, inviting remarkable Amsterdammers to share the hidden gems of their neighbourhood. Our guide for Oostenburg is Jacquill G. Basdew curator, artist and intersectional thinker. Through bsdwcorp, his artistic and social practice, he connects art and culture with social issues. He is a member of the Amsterdam City Curatorium and the Supervisory Board of Kunstmuseum Den Haag and DutchCulture.
This story lives where art and insight meet.
We invite you to enter the world of See All This — Join those who journey deeper.
photography: Daan Kamerman
Recent stories
-
Column •
BREAKING #306: ‘I’m not a performing monkey’
-
Column •
BREAKING #305: It grew dark, but we didn’t need any light.
-
Column •
Li’s Forecast #8: Patterns in textile
-
Column •
Asma’s Beauty Case: ‘Who am I actually working for?’
-
Article •
There’s No Movement Without Friction: Director David Claerbout on ‘The Woodcarver and the Forest’
-
Column •
BREAKING #304: ‘If you have not stood face to face with something, it has simply not truly been known by you.’
-
Column •
BREAKING #303: ‘That dizzying, hopeless procession of transformations’
-
Article •
The Making Of:: Judy Chicago in Amsterdam
-
Article •
Morocco: a playground for progressive art: 1-54 in Marrakech
-
Column •
Li’s Forecast #7: Solid Energy
-
Guide • No. 40 •
Chef’s Favourites: Books, films, restaurants and recipes
-
Article •
A landscape, archive and statement: The iconic Lady Dior reimagined by artists
-
Article •
A Weekend with The Twins: In Amsterdam
-
Article • No. 40 •
A Taste of Mory’s Magic: Recreate His Festive Soup Dish at Home
-
Article • No. 40 •
Fruits, Fats & Fundaments: Lessons in Nutrition from the Streets of London
-
Article •
The Dinner Party: 10 Years See All This
-
Article •
The Gentle Radicalism of Eating Together: A Night with The Macallan at Flore
-
Article •
10 years of See All This: ‘Do you like the party?’
-
Visual Essay • No. 40 •
Feeding the Eye: A Visual Banquet
-
Article • No. 31 •
Why Doctors Are Prescribing Art: 10x When Art Becomes Medicine




















