Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw orchestra played second fiddle to a pair of hairdressers and Vincent van Gogh’s self-portraits were briefly upstaged by a nail salon and barber as civil disobedience to protest against the Dutch coronavirus lockdown spread to the cultural sector.

The Netherlands has been in a tough lockdown since mid-December.

Under an easing of restrictions announced on Friday, businesses like hairdressers and gyms and nonessential stores were allowed to reopen, but museums, theatres and cinemas, along with bars and restaurants, have to remain closed.

The tough Dutch lockdown is running into increasing anger from businesses hit by the restrictions.

Last week and over the weekend hundreds of Dutch bars and restaurants also opened their doors as a protest against the lockdown they say is crippling their businesses.

People get a haircut during a rehearsal at the Concertgebouw (Peter Dejong/AP)
People get a haircut during a rehearsal at the Concertgebouw (Peter Dejong/AP)

On Wednesday it was the turn of the cultural sector, who turned themselves into businesses such as hairdressers or nail salons to press home their demand to reopen.

“We do not understand and there is no reasoning for it because we have shown over the last two years that it’s very, very safe to go to a concert or to go to a museum,” said Simon Reinink, director of Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw concert hall.

“Actually, it’s our profession — crowd management.

“We know how to deal with large crowds.

“And we’ve done it in a very, very safe way,” Mr Reinink added.

The resident orchestra, conducted by Susanna Malkki, played American composer Charles Ives’ Symphony Number 2, while two hairdressers cut hair in the historic venue.

People take a yoga class at the Amsterdam Museum in Amsterdam (Peter Dejong/AP)
People take a yoga class at the Amsterdam Museum in Amsterdam (Peter Dejong/AP)

Across the street at the Van Gogh Museum, a barber cut the hair of 10 visitors and 10 more people got a nail treatment.

“It’s definitely a first for us at the Van Gogh Museum,” the museum’s director, Emilie Gordenker, said.

“I understand that the government has opened gyms but … you need a mental gym, too, and a museum is a place where people are increasingly coming to find a little depth or reason for their life,” she added.

“And the theme of mental health is particularly relevant to our museum, obviously, because of Vincent van Gogh’s own mental situation.”

The government has said it will look at possible further easing on January 25.

While Omicron has sent infection rates soaring to levels never earlier seen during the pandemic, hospital admissions continue to decline.

Culture Minister Gunay Uslu said in a tweet: “I understand the cry for help and that artists want to show all the beautiful things they have to offer us.

“But the opening of society must go step by step.

“Culture is high on the agenda.”