The Rijksakademie partners in Pressing Matter, a four-year research programme, coordinated by the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, that connects fundamental theories of valuation and property to postcolonial debates on heritage.
The goal is to develop and test new theoretical models of value and ownership and new forms of return that extend current approaches to heritage restitution. Participating artists are invited to think about the ways in which art practice can reimagine different forms of return, repair, and reconciliation broadly conceived, working with objects/collections in the project's partner museums – amongst others the Rijksmuseum and the Dutch National Museum of World Cultures – collected during the colonial period.
Other partners include, amongst others, Foundation Academic Heritage, the NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, The Black Archives, HAPIN Papua Support Foundation, Framer Framed and the Peace Palace Library.
— 1 September until 30 November 2022 —
Project proposal
For the Pressing Matter Residency Daniel Aguilar Ruvalcaba proposed to work with one of the main pieces of the Central and South American collection of the Museum Volkenkunde in Leiden(NL): a Mexican skull decorated with turquoise mosaic that was produced in the 20th century but had been erroneously considered a Late Postclassic (AD 1300-1521) Mixtec artifact until the 21st century. For decades, the creation of this mosaic skull was attributed to the Ñuu Savi people: it was thought they made it before the Spanish Conquest. The skull was purchased on the art market so nothing was known about its origin before 1962. As a result, some questioned its provenance. So, the research conducted in 2012 by Dr. Martin Berger (Leiden University and Museum of World Cultures) was set out to determine if the skull was spurious or original. After all the results of studies and evidence at hand, Dr. Martin Berger concluded that the Leiden mosaic skull is a modern combination of authentic elements. A détournement of authentic pre-Hispanic materials —skull, mosaics— assembled with a modern type of glue —Shellac: Laccifer lacca—.
In the article, “Real, Fake or a Combination?”, Dr. Martin Berger recounts the history of the skull. This meticulous research is my principal guide for composing the biography of this object. According to Dr. Martin Berger, Dr. P.H. Pott bought the skull from a gringo dealer in 1963 while serving as director of the Museum Volkenkunde. The gringo dealer who sold the piece asserted it had been found in a tomb at an archaeological site near Teotitlán del Camino, a small town on the border of Oaxaca and Puebla, in Southern Mexico. Due to the finish of the mosaic on the skull, the piece was stated to be an authentic manufacture of the Mixtec / Ñuu Savi culture, dating to 1300-1521. Dr. Pott was seduced by it because it was ‘an object of such rarity and value that I would feel it wrong to reject this offer without first having made the utmost effort to obtain the resources to acquire it‘. So, he decided that the museum must acquire
the mosaic skull without confirming its authenticity. He was fascinated with the beauty of it. It full filled the fantasies about Mesoamerican artifacts after discovering the treasures of the Tumba 7 of Monte Alban.
Finding that the mosaic skull is ‘fake’ affected how it is perceived, identified, and shown in the museum collection. I started questioning, can a fake be more Real than we think? What is a forgery forging? Is the Mexican State the biggest counterfeiter of the pre Hispanic past? And what can we learn from it? Is it possible to find the cultural descendants of this phony mosaic skull device? How to write a claim for restitution for a fabrication like this sort? What was happening in Mexico during the time of the Mesoamerican archaeology boom? How did the close relationship between archeology and politics after the Mexican Revolution play a role in the forgery market? Is the glue, this Modern, spurious element, something else than that? Could it be a forgery, perhaps a little more than that, a crucial site for an extemporaneous political fiction?
— Winter 2022 until June 2023 —
Lifepatch is a citizen initiative engaged in the fields of art, science, and technology. This organization is a cross-disciplinary community established on March 26, 2012 in Yogyakarta. Lifepatch is located in Bausasran, where they share a place with several other collectives that also carry out their activities there.
— 1 December 2022 until 31 May 2023 —
— 1 September until 30 November 2023 —
Aram Lee was born in Seoul and lives and works in Amsterdam. As an artist, her research-driven practice revolves around reinterpreting materials found within institutions, often seeking to relocate their role and purpose through performative events, film and video installations. Sometimes taking up processes of performative action with the public, her practice shapes the way objects are described and circulated. Her artworks challenge diasporic amnesia and release impure, spectral and false fictions from the institutions to enable the dissolution of (cultural) predominance and visualize new structures.
Aram will do research based on climate objects in the depot of the Tropenmuseum, and she will develop a digital algorithm.
— 15 June until 15 September 2022 —
Zara Julius (Johannesburg) is an interdisciplinary artist, researcher and vinyl selector based in Johannesburg, South Africa. She is also the founder of Pan-African creative research and cultural storytelling agency, KONJO. Her practice is informed by a working methodology of ‘rapture’, and is concerned with the relationship between performativity, frequency, concealment and fugitivity in the settler (post) colony, with a special focus on what we call the ‘Global South’. Working with sound, video, performance and objects, Zara’s practice involves the collection, selection, collage and creation of archives (real, imagined and embodied) through extensive research projects.
Zoé Samudzi is the Charles E. Scheidt Visiting Assistant Professor of Genocide Studies and Genocide Prevention at the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University. She holds a PhD in Medical Sociology from the University of California, San Francisco in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences. She is also a Research Associate with the Center for the Study of Race, Gender & Class (RGC) at the University of Johannesburg.
Zoé is a writer and critic whose work has appeared in Art in America, Artforum, Bookforum, The New Inquiry, The Architectural Review, The New Republic, the Funambulist, and other outlets. She is an associate editor with Parapraxis Magazine, a contributing writer at Jewish Currents, and co-author of As Black as Resistance: Finding the Conditions for Liberation (AK Press).
She is represented by Alison Lewis at the Francis Goldin Literary Agency.
— 1 September until 30 November 2023 —
CPR (Charlotte Rooijackers) works as an artist dealing with language, vegetation, and translation, rooted at the intersections of Marxist-feminisms and postcolonial-discourse. Recent works include 'BOOTY' at Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (2021); and 'Fl. FLor. Floruit' at Four Sisters Labyrinth (2021), 'Is It Possible to be a Revolutionary and Like Flowers', Nest Ruimte Den Haag (2021) and in 'The Botanical Revolution at Centraal Museum Utrecht (2021-2022). She writes for Studium Generale Rietveld Academie Amsterdam (2013-), does collaborative writing classes, and keeps a politics of vegetation in order to become more dead-and-alive and less product.
Arus Balik is a restitution work on the Batak Pustaha manuscripts from North Sumatra, which are divination books that were taken by Dutch and German missionaries in the nineteenth century, to colonial institutions in the Netherlands and elsewhere. The manuscripts contain the Indigenous spiritual-religious knowledge system of the Batak, and were written by datu-priests.
During the coming three months CPR will work on the concept of rematriation in restitution discourse, the digitization of the Pustaha collections in the Netherlands, and collaborate with the Perempuan AMAN Tano Batak, the Batak chapter of the Indigenous Women's Alliance of Nusantara [Indonesia].
— 1 December 2023 until 30 April 2024 —
Pansee Atta is an Egyptian-Canadian visual artist, curator, and researcher living and working on the unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishnaabe nation in Ottawa. Using a variety of new media, her work examines themes of representation, migration, archives, and political struggle. Previous residencies include the Impressions Residency Award at the Montréal Museum of Fine Arts, the SparkBox Studio Award, and at the Atelier of Alexandria. Previous exhibitions have taken place in collaboration with SAW Video in Ottawa, at Galerie La Centrale Powerhouse and Z Art Space in Montréal. Her research centers community-based responses to colonial projects of collection, display, study.
Pressing Matter Artist residency
'To Make One Particle of the Publick Soul of all Things'
This project draws its title from Thomas Browne’s 17th century text lamenting the European trade in Egyptian mummies, such as that of the anatomist Otto Van Heurius whose "groote Mumie" served as the star attraction of the Netherlands’ first museum. Browne urges his readers to consider the humanity of the ancient dead who “were content to recede into the common being, and make one particle of the publick soul of all things.”
Along similar lines, the Arabic-language concept of "ḥurma" — encompassing autonomy, inviolability, taboo, sanctity, physical integrity, privacy, protection, and honor, particularly of the human body — is central to cultural norms in Muslim-majority nations, especially concerning museum exhibitions of human remains. 'To Make One Particle of the Publick Soul of all Things' makes the "ḥurma" of human remains in Dutch museum collections visible using AR, electronic art, traditional media, and archival research. Doing so, it proposes a way of relating to the ancient dead that exceeds their objectification and commercialization.
For previous projects, see:
www.panseeatta.com
www.instagram.com/panseeatta
— 1 June until 1 October 2024 —
Gelare Khoshgozaran is an undisciplinary artist and filmmaker whose work engages with the legacies of imperial violence manifested in war, militarization and borders. They use film and video to construct peripheral narratives that seek to redefine existing constructions of ‘home’ as a means of approaching new conceptualizations of belonging. Khoshgozaran has presented their work internationally, with recent exhibitions and screenings at MoMA Doc Fortnight, Delfina Foundation, Images Festival, EMPAC, MASS MoCA and the Hammer Museum. With a BA in Photography from University of Arts in Tehran (2009), and an MFA from University of Southern California (2011), they are a co-editor of ‘MARCH: a journal of art and strategy’, and assistant professor of art at UCLA School of Art and Architecture.
Hande Sever is a writer and research-based artist who received her MFA from California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) and her PhD from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Archival research is the main drive of her practice, as she excavates lost texts and distant images to bring attention to events and memories erased from the collective consciousness and recontextualizes transnational instances of political struggle in the process. Her works have been presented internationally at institutions such as the Hauser & Wirth in Somerset (UK); MAK Museum in Vienna (AT); Museo de las Artes in Guadalajara (MX); CICA Museum in Seoul (KR); MCA Chicago, IL (US); and the Wende Museum in Los Angeles, CA (US), among others. She has been an artist-in-residence at Hauser & Wirth (Somerset, UK), SOMA (Mexico City, MX, Human Resources (Los Angeles, CA) and Kulturakademie Tarabya (Istanbul, TR). Her works have been supported with grants from the Félix González-Torres Foundation, California Arts Council, Getty Foundation, Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts and Hrant Dink Foundation.
Welcome to the 2025 Open Studios!
Open Studios is that moment each year when the Rijksakademie opens its doors to share with the public the breadth of artistic practice being developed here. What is usually a quiet environment for open-ended artistic research and creation becomes a vibrant site to explore the work of 50 artists who have come here for two-year residencies from all over the world and the Netherlands. At the Rijks, they have the possibility to draw on a wide range of resources and have conversations with many different interlocutors, enabling them to explore, deepen, and develop new areas within their practices – and beyond.
Introduction
Art practice is ongoing, durational, relational, and iterative, and plays out at the Rijksakademie all year round, with many interconnecting threads. Words, sounds, sketches, movement practices, and various modes of sociality were present for us in the lead up to the Open Studios. Our approach is to bring into view the many aspects of artistic process and expanded practice – and, where possible, into contact. In many cases this already happens naturally within the community, and over the last year, this included gatherings around shared interests, such as sound, radio, reading, social practice, and research questions.
These tendencies led us to designate various spaces for collective interests to assemble, both continuing processes already in motion and building further lines of connection. This includes a resident-led radio station, a listening room, a dark space for film screenings and lectures, a publication of artist writing, engagements with the collection, an exhibition of sketches that were part of the art-making process, artist lullabies collected together by residents in the library, a bookshop that also functions as a reading room and space for conversations and encounters, and a presentation of experiments from the tech fellows of 2024 and 2025. A number of residents have individually and collectively sited their work in various locations, demonstrating an active engagement with the building and site. Furthermore, a presentation of research experiments in the paint workshop made palpable the processes of making.
The opening up of such exploration within the working environment extends our broader acknowledgement and encouragement of different artistic forms, lines of inquiry, methods of making, experimentation, modes of gathering and working together, both in the studio and beyond, which have been part of the Rijksakademie for many years. Residents and colleague advisors have been involved in shaping these frameworks, including Christodoulos Panayiotou on performance and sound, Helen Verhoeven on how drawings are part of artistic process, and Reza Afisina on social practice and radio. There is a programme of performances and talks extending from the practices of the current residents.
A number of collective initiatives for dialogues between people and practices were formed, present in and beyond the Open Studios. This includes a study group on art and labour developed in collaboration with Aria Spinelli and de Appel, a conversation on art and education, a weekly Feldenkrais session led by Yael Davids, and the DEWORK decolonial workshop, a tutorial for weaving decolonial academic and artistic research practices led by Rolando Vázquez (in partnership with the Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis UvA, Jan van Eyck Academie, and the EYE Film Museum).
We are grateful for all the inspiring dialogues and collaborations that have fed into this year’s Open Studios, and that we are now excited to share with the wider public. Thank you for your visit, and please enjoy the richness of the many practices and ideas circulating within and beyond our community and building!
Yael Davids and Emily Pethick
Open Studios is coordinated by Emily Pethick (director) and Yael Davids (advisor), in collaboration with advisors Reza Afisina, Christodoulos Panayiotou and Helen Verhoeven. It is put together thanks to the dedication and hard work of our resident artists and our whole team.
There will be no ticket sales at the door. Tickets can be only purchased online.
* Please bring your discount card (Student-, CJP, Amsterdam City Card) with you to the entrance.
If you purchase a passe-partout, this gives you access to all days of Open Studios. Please bring your ticket to the entrance to collect your wristband.
The Rijksakademie is located at Sarphatistraat 470 in the former Kavallerie-Kazerne, near the centre of Amsterdam. The building is situated next to the Muiderpoort, close to the Tropenmuseum and ARTIS and within easy reach of the NS stations.
The Weesperplein Metro station is a 7-minute walk from the Rijksakademie. Tram 7, 14 and 19 stop in front of the door (Alexanderplein stop). Do check gvb.nl for the most current updates in public transport.
Find more detailed directions at the bottom of our contact page.
Please note that there is no possibility to park your car or bike on our premises.
The building is wheelchair accessible. The accessible toilet is located on the second floor.
If you need assistance during your visit, you can reach out to us at openstudios@rijksakademie.nl. We will then contact you about the possibilities of providing you with the appropriate support.
There is no cloakroom at the Rijksakademie. Handbags are allowed if they are smaller than A4. Unfortunately, there is no room for backpacks. A limited number of lockers is available at the entrance.
It’s not allowed to bring food and drinks inside the building. There are different snacks and drinks available at the Rijksakademie courtyard, which you can enjoy there.
Dogs are not allowed, with the exception of service dogs.
Become our Friend and support promising artists.
Rijksakademie Friends ensure that today’s undiscovered talents are tomorrow’s great artists. When becoming a Friend, you will get access to the behind-the-scenes of the artistic practice and get to meet many artists during previews and special events. Or support an artist and contribute to the development of a successful artistic career.
A big thank you to our main partner Ammodo, Fonds 21, De Gijselaar-Hintzenfonds, Stichting Hendrik Muller’s Vaderlandsch Fonds, Stichting Hinderrust Fonds, Brouwerij ’t IJ, Chateau Amsterdam, Deciao Cocktail Seltzer and pit for making Open Studios 2025 possible.