Broersma Arthouse March 28/29, 2026

On March 28 and 29, 2026, Broersma organized a Broersma Arthouse at Van Eeghenlaan 28 in Amsterdam. During this two-day event, a unique group of artists was brought together in a distinctive home where art and architecture converge. The participating artists were brought together for this occasion by artist Robbert de Goede, who also had his own work featured in the exhibition. Visitors had the opportunity to experience the art in an intimate, home-like setting. This created an inspiring encounter between art, space, and the public. Read more.

Nicolien Kloppart kunst

Nicolien van KloppArt collects and sells art with love. From lithography to personalized art advice at home: her gallery is a place full of stories and inspiration.

Broersma Arthouse

At Broersma we believe that special spaces for living and working begin with inspiration. Not only in architecture or interior design, but also in art. Art sharpens our vision, enriches our environment, and connects people with ideas and with each other. That is why, through Broersma Arthouse, we support art initiatives that give Amsterdam color, depth and imagination. Read here what we support in June 2025

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Broersma Arthouse

On March 28 and 29, 2026, Broersma organized a Broersma Arthouse at Van Eeghenlaan 28 in Amsterdam. During this two-day event, a unique group of artists was brought together in a distinctive home where art and architecture converge. The participating artists were brought together for this occasion by artist Robbert de Goede, who also had his own work featured in the exhibition. Visitors had the opportunity to experience the art in an intimate, home-like setting. This created an inspiring encounter between art, space, and the public.

Concept

Art is so much more than just something you hang on the wall. It is a way to share stories, bring generations together in conversation, and discover new perspectives. That is why Broersma Arthouse supports initiatives that provide space for encounters, talent, and inspiration.

Broersma Arthouse is an initiative through which Broersma actively engages with art and culture in Amsterdam. We support cultural projects that enrich the city, from galleries to independent creators, and we do so not as a distant sponsor, but as an involved partner.

Broersma believes that special spaces to live and work in start with inspiration. Not only through architecture or interior design, but also through art. Art sharpens our gaze, enriches our environment, and connects people with ideas and with each other.

 

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Robbert the Good

Robbert de Goede grew up with Montessori education, where his interest in art was stimulated early on by museum visits and drawing lessons. The Stedelijk Museum and the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam were particularly important sources of inspiration. After high school, he studied Interior Architecture at the Utrecht School of the Arts (HKU). During his studies, he spent a semester at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he immersed himself in visual arts and the relationship between art and architecture.

After graduating, he founded a studio with fellow architects, before starting his own firm in 2003. He designed interiors for residences, offices, restaurants, and shops, with a strong focus on spatial composition and floor plans. During the economic crisis, a new direction emerged parallel to his architectural practice: his first exhibition of wire studies in an Amsterdam gallery marked the beginning of his career as an artist.

In his work, De Goede explores how people behave and move in spaces. Themes such as time, movement, light, and meditation play a central role. His sculptures, constructed from wire and transparent structures, create spatial compositions in which emptiness and form are equally important. As in architecture, it is often the spaces in between—the places we move through—that give meaning to the experience.

His work invites the viewer to move around it and experience it from different perspectives. Movement allows the work to unfold, creating a moment of deceleration and reflection. De Goede draws inspiration from cosmological processes, mathematical structures, and natural phenomena, in which chaos is gradually transformed into order.

Today, Robbert de Goede combines his practice as an artist and architect, with both disciplines continuing to influence each other. He lives and works in Amsterdam and is represented by galleries in Germany, Spain, and Belgium.

For this edition, Robbert de Goede brought the participating artists together and invited them to be part of the exhibition.

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Daphne Glasmacher

Daphne Glasmacher (Ede, 1979) is a multidisciplinary artist who lives and works in Amsterdam. Her work lies at the intersection of perception, light, and space. She explores how optical and sensory stimuli can shift our perspective and how, through the act of looking, we are invited to slow down and relive the moment. Fascinated by optical illusions, geometry, and changing natural phenomena, she explores how movement, contrast, and rhythm influence our perception.

Daphne Glasmacher creates visually powerful and layered compositions in which order and freedom, tranquility and dynamism come together. In her work, she searches for the moment when experience and abstraction intersect, the point at which visual elements evoke a form of magic. In doing so, she invites the viewer to pause, slow down, and experience the moment anew.
She works with innovative techniques and modern materials, such as plexiglass, glass, print, and projection. Her work moves between the two- and three-dimensional plane, from minimalist mixed media to spatial Services and installations stimulate the senses and shift perspectives.

Her work has been exhibited in Berlin, Schloss Biesdorf, Paris at Galerie Mark Hachem, and presented at PAN Amsterdam, Art Rotterdam, and various fairs in the Netherlands by Kunsthandel Galerie Meijer in Utrecht.

 

Minoesch Beeldstroo – Profile photo
Minoesch Beeldstroo – Viná.

Minoesch Beeldstroo

Minoesch Beeldstroo (1996) is a designer who works at the intersection of form, material, and intuition. From an early age, she has been fascinated by the beauty and fragility of nature, a fascination that is evident in her designs. In her work, she translates this wonder into tangible objects that combine experimentation, new techniques, and attention to detail.

In 2021, she graduated in Product Design from the Utrecht School of the Arts (HKU). Since then, she has been exploring the relationship between form, fragility, and functionality in her practice, with a particular focus on porcelain. Her objects are created through a careful process of attention, patience, and research, in which material and form gradually reinforce each other.

During the creative process, Beeldstroo is strongly guided by intuition. An object only comes into being when the form feels natural to her—a moment when balance, material, and meaning come together.

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Françoise Jeffrey

Françoise Jeffrey is a ceramic artist based in Amsterdam. Her work is characterized by organic forms and hand-built sculptural objects that are intuitively constructed from rolls of clay. Each piece is unique and highlights the natural texture and imperfections of the material.

Jeffrey’s journey into ceramics began in her childhood, when her mother enrolled her in art classes and she developed a love for clay. Years later, during a sabbatical in 2020 following her mother’s passing, she found peace and purpose once again in working with clay. What started as a way to make space for grief and reflection quickly evolved into an artistic practice.

When she began sharing her work on Instagram, interest grew rapidly. Not long after, she was invited to exhibit at 1000 Vases during Paris Design Week, after which her work gained international attention and found its way into the homes of collectors around the world.

Jeffrey works intuitively and without preliminary sketches. Her pieces remain unglazed, allowing the purity of the clay to shine through and requiring only a single firing. Each piece bears a name beginning with “Modder,” a play on words that refers to both clay and her mother, to whom she dedicates her work.

Through her ceramic pieces, Françoise Jeffrey aims above all to convey a message: a little extra courage to stay true to yourself, trust your intuition, and embrace the beauty of imperfection.

Properties

28 Van Eeghen Avenue, Amsterdam

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AM105684-1914817-Van-Eeghenlaan 28, Amsterdam-269068850

Previously, Broersma Arthouse organized the first edition of De Nieuwe Vernissage together with art scout Cécé Cohen.

Read more

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Arts & culture calendar March 2026

There is always something fun to do in Amsterdam, but what will we be doing in March 2026? Amsterdam will still be buzzing in 2026. From inspiring exhibitions to new theater plays and film screenings, the city will once again be full of cultural highlights. Step into a museum, dive into a theater, or discover a special event. Want to experience something new? Check out our latest cultural tips here!

A gallery that cares. In her home in Amsterdam Oud-Zuid, Marian Cramer developed a gallery practice that deviates from the classic model.

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