The Hard Edge of the Labour of Time

Hosted at PAKT Foundation, Zeeburgerpad 53

Opening: Friday 31 October, 17:00 – 21:00 hrs
Until 7 December, Thu-Sun 14:00 – 17:00 hrs

I can never remember my passport number – no matter how many times in a row I need to write it down. Reaching for my backpack, zzzzzip* opendoen. There it is, flip page, find number, type it in. 

When people ask me why I live in the Netherlands I always tell them it’s because I love Dutch bureaucracy. Lips turn up in a sly smile as I fill out paper documents from my home country. Done, stamp, put it in the envelope, ouch!

Finger to mouth, salty brine. Papercut straight across the thumb. White paper, black text, red stain. Cutting into the imprints of my identity – that pink identity in blue ink pressed against the beige paper of police files stored away in another continent. Straight across, cutting through who I really am.

Photograph. Eyes closed. Try again.

This exhibition is about time, the impossibility of rest in an age in which tasks pile up endlessly. It’s about maintenance – time means you need to attend to things on a monthly/weekly/daily basis. How is this doubled, tripled, when you have responsibilities towards other living beings or when you’re waiting for a visa that is always imminently expired, for a rent contract that’s always about to end. Where will we be in a years’ time, two? Security is about eliminating temporalities, finding permanence in a world based on obsoletion and subscription models that thrive on insecurity.

It’s always about stepping on a fine line – a hopscotch of possibilities. Andrea Knezović explores how tempo affects production in a newly commissioned kinetic sculpture that leaves pressured traces to gradually build up in intensity throughout the duration of the exhibition. This archive of temporality is surrounded by her signature spatial diagrams that provoke questions on our relationship to ourselves, community, space, and contemporary politics.

Yeşim Akdeniz presents a series of fabric sculptures that contend with the performativity of choice and the symbols of identity construction in a world defined by mobility. Two voting booths are adorned with dramatic curtains recalling the stage and the spectacle. Suitcases are a recurring element in Akdeniz’s work that refer to migration and portable property along with the buttons often featured in her work that create a physical connection between bodily dimensions and mechanical labour.

The exhibition reflects on the constant necessity to produce in a society that does not leave space to rest or room to breathe. It approaches topics of care, labour, and queer and migrant identities through a feminist lens in spatial installations. It will be accompanied by a public programme that expands on the themes through the perspectives of various actors on Amsterdam’s cultural scene.

We are grateful for the generous support from: AFK, Mondriaan Funds, Brouwerij ‘t IJ

Credits:

Graphic Design: Marit van der Gevel
Technical Work: Otakar Zwaartjes
Dutch wordmaster: Falke Pisano
Photography: Bart Lunenburg
Space & Facilities: PAKT Foundation
Initiation: Doris Benhalegua Beri

 

Yeşim Akdeniz was a resident at De Ateliers in Amsterdam in 2002 until 2004 and won the Kunstverein Bonn/Peter Mertes Stipendium in 2005. She has exhibited her work at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Kunstverein Frankfurt; Sammlung Philara, Düsseldorf; and Kunstverein Bielefeld among many others. Yeşim Akdeniz’s practice is marked by symbolic narratives that reflect cultural production, negotiation, and identity formation. Through a distinct visual language, she explores the migration of forms, materials, and labor, weaving personal and cultural references into layered readings of history, identity, and collective memory.The artist currently lives and works between Brussels and Düsseldorf.

Andrea Knezović (b. 1990, Zagreb) is a visual artist, researcher, and writer based in Amsterdam. She holds a Research Master’s from the University of Amsterdam (2019) and a Bachelor of Honours from the Academy of Visual Arts, Ljubljana (2015). Knezovićs’ work integrates various tactics of how psycho-cultural politics shape bodies, language, and systems of care. She is co-author of Nocturnalities: Bargaining Beyond Rest (Onomatopee, 2025), and her writing has appeared in Thresholds Journal (MIT Press), Set Margins Publishing (Eindhoven), and Simulacrum (University of Amsterdam). Knezović has received the BAK Fellowship and residency for Situated Practice at BAK-basis voor actuele kunst. Her work has been exhibited internationally at institutions including MUZA Museum (2025), Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Ljubljana (2024), Croatian Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale (2024 – invited by Vlatka Horvat), Cukrarna (2023), Keller Gallery at MIT (2022), Kiribati National Museum (2019), and Nieuw Dakota (2019) among others. She co-founded MARC Amsterdam (2020–2023) and was Chair of the Board of Salwa Foundation (2022–2024). 

Àngels Miralda (1990) is an independent writer and curator. Her recent exhibitions include the Contemporary Biennial TEA (Tenerife), Something Else III & IV (Cairo Off-Biennale); MAAC (Guayaquil); Garage Art Space (Nicosia); Radius CCA (Delft), PAKT Foundation (Amsterdam), Indebt (Amsterdam), Mutter (Amsterdam), Bradwolff Projects (Amsterdam), Sally’s Fault (Amsterdam), De Appel (Amsterdam), Tallinn Art Hall (Estonia), MGLC – International Centre for Graphic Arts (Ljubljana), Galerija Miroslav Kraljevic (Municipal Gallery of Zagreb), the Museum of Contemporary Art of Chile (Santiago), Museu de Angra do Heroísmo (Terceira – Azores), and the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Art (Riga) among many others. Miralda wrote for Artforum from 2019-2023 and served as Editor-in-Chief at Collecteurs from 2021-2025. She has published texts in monographs and catalogues published by Phaidon Press, TBA21, and Cukrarna among others. She lives and works in Amsterdam.

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