TOWN MEETINGS has its genealogy in past regular GDR events from 2009–2010. These include Home Cinema, where the screening of films that touch upon different aspects of domesticity, neighbourhood organisation, urban planning and alternative politics, take place; Thursday Night Supper, occasions for cooking, eating and discussion with various guests, and the midterm manifestation GDR GOES ON which consisted of a series of events over four days in domestic, private, and public spaces in Utrecht.
Doris Denekamp is a Rotterdam based artist, currently following the master course in fine art at the Dutch Art Institute. She was a GDR resident from 13 December 2010 -7 January 2011 where she worked on the Expanding Balcony project together with artist Arend Groosman. In this project they developed a Meal Machine, a greenhouse constructed following open-source techniques. This 'machine' will grow a collection of crops which will be harvested, prepared and consumed during a collective harvesting ritual-dinner. The Expanding Balcony project is a follow-up to the balcony 'moestuin' set up by the Centre of Cooperative living, a project by Sepake Angiama.
www.dorisdenekamp.nl.
Philanthropic Pharmacy

Pharmacopoea Ultrajectina. The first Utrecht pharmacist User's Manual printed in 1656
Pharmacopoea (spelling variation: pharmacopoiea) is a pharmaceutical manual listing medicinal drugs with their effects and directions for use. Today I looked at several very old copies of pharmacist manuals made and published in Utrecht in one of the Utrecht city archives holdings. The first Pharmacopoea ever to be made in Utrecht the Pharmacopoea Ultrajectina is a very small pocket sized booklet (entirely in Latin) published in 1656. Most of the ‘drug’ sources come directly from plants (roots, leaves, sap, flowers, bark and seed), animal parts, extracts or faeces (among some of the ingredients are crayfish eyes, honey, cow stomach bile, or jaws of a snook), minerals, flours, and sea vegetables (sponges).
A much later version, ‘Pharmacopoea Pauperum’ (Armen Apotheek, Pharmacy for the Poor), published in 1830, was written as a kind of welfare pharmaceutical production manual for pharmacists to make and sell medicines at a minimum cost so poor people could also be properly treated.

‘Armen Apotheek’ Utrecht Pharmacy manual for making economical prescriptions for those who could not easily afford medicines

Pharmacopoea Pauperum. Another edition of the Utrecht Pharmacist’s manual for making inexpensive medicine
24 June 2010, 23.30 — posted by Wietske
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