Frontpage(s)
Miray van der Bend
She/her
Dutch/Turkish, 1997
mirayvdbend.com
Thesis: I want to be improbable beautiful and afraid of nothing, as though I had wings
In the east of the Netherlands, right in front of my childhood home, a
Turkish choir sings. A cultural contrast between two worlds. Here arises the
longing for a lost homeland, a sentiment shared by many Turkish-Dutch
individuals. You can settle elsewhere, but it never has the unquestioned
certainty of where you come from. With relocation, a certain unbroken naivety
about identity and place is lost. For generations, a deep homesickness for
the past and the homeland has remained.
Thus, the one who settles in another country remains, in a sense, always on
the journey, between here and there, between then and now. You are never
fully there; it is there, and yet not quite.
A longing for the idea of the past remains.
This work emerges from my personal quest for my Turkish identity. I grew up
in the east of the Netherlands with a Turkish mother and a Dutch father. My
Turkish mother often plays a central role in my work, and this journey began
with her. With this work, I want to fully return to the core, to the origin
of my identity. The Turkish choir, placed in front of my childhood home,
symbolizes the connection between my Dutch upbringing and my Turkish
heritage. It is a representation of the quest for who I am, a celebration of
my roots, and an acknowledgment of the complexity of my background.
With this work, I try to represent the hope that memories can be kept alive
and lost pieces of our identity can be rediscovered. This work is a monument
to my childhood, my family, and the shared longing of many for a place that
no longer physically exists, but will always live on in our hearts.