Arts Thread

Eva-Lotte van Rossen
Photography BA

Royal Academy Of Art The Hague KABK

Specialisms: Photography / Film / Fine Art

Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands

eva-lotte-van-rossen ArtsThread Profile
Royal Academy Of Art The Hague KABK

Eva-Lotte van Rossen

Eva-Lotte van Rossen ArtsThread Profile

First Name: Eva-Lotte

Last Name: van Rossen

Specialisms: Photography / Film / Fine Art

Sectors:

My Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands

University / College: Royal Academy Of Art The Hague KABK

Course / Program Title: Photography BA

About

Eva-Lotte, an Amsterdam-based mixed-media artist, uses photography to anchor her work. She graduated in photography at the Royal Academy of Arts (KABK) in The Hague. Her practice extends beyond the visual realm as she also follows a studies Gender & Sexuality at the University of Amsterdam while pursuing her Anthropology degree.

With her art practice, Eva-Lotte touches upon personal topics and seeks to unearth structures and societal taboos. Her work serves as a mirror, challenging perspectives and revealing her reflections on the world and the narratives that shape it. She creates space for others and invites people to contemplate or engage with the work.

Through the tangible nature of her art, she strives to give form to the intangible and hidden, inciting conversations on social themes close to her heart, such as gender, sexuality, mental health, and family dynamics.

Het Kolenhok begins with my grandparents’ affiliation with the NSB, a National Socialist party during World War II, and the exclusion they faced afterwards. The silence surrounding their past shaped family relationships and influenced my sense of identity. This project reflects on how inherited and transgenerational trauma quietly inhabits the body and mind, not just in stories but in the things left unsaid. The work presents a multidisciplinary installation that includes framed carbon prints, an archive table with a document, and a moving image titled Stamboomgegevens, graag vertrouwelijk mee om gaan (5m58s), developed in collaboration with Sjaan Flikweert. The four carbon prints introduce emotion and narrative, while the archive table holds collected materials to provide the contextual background of my story. These elements are a glimpse into the inaccessible, revealing how much history remains fragmented or obscured. The publication ties these threads together in a tactile form, combining image, text, and record to evoke the enduring effects of secrecy and shame. Trauma is no stranger to me. It has been a presence since before I was born. Though rooted in personal experience, the project tries to point out broader societal patterns that keep trauma in place through silence, historical denial, and binary right and wrong thinking. This polarisation, visible in politics, media, and everyday interactions, often overlooks context and complexity, reinforcing unresolved pain. Het Kolenhok creates space for viewers to reflect, hold, and reconsider what remains unresolved, shedding light on how buried secrets and internalised shame prevent healing and perpetuate trauma across generations.