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Program 2025-2028 start

HOHA & TOTI

The first new residents have arrived, materials have been ordered, and boundaries are being explored and stretched. Over the next four years, we will embark on an experiment in which two parallel programs intersect and strengthen each other.

We are letting go of the traditional idea of an exhibition with a fixed beginning and end. Instead, we are organizing shifts of artists, writers, and collectives. Each season, this culminates in a 'Samenscholingsweek' (Gathering Week), where activities are bundled into a vibrant mix of artistic and social experimentation. For this program, we are collaborating with the art collective Sunflower Soup and curator Lenn Cox. The first Gathering Week will take place from March 17–22, with more details in the March newsletter.

HOHA by Sunflower Soup

For a four-year program at Plaatsmaken, Sunflower Soup presents HOHA. HOHA is a spicy soup of wordplay and visual discoveries that we will keep simmering for four years. It is a platform for finding new ways for people to make their voices heard, using the space and resources that Plaatsmaken provides. Posters, protest (Ho!), poetry & pleasure (Ha!).

We start with homemade protest signs featuring inventive slogans and move through spoken word, dreamy poets, local residents, craftspeople, graphic hardliners, and printers resisting oppression. We experiment with new combinations of all these elements, creating them in our workshops in rotating shifts. The results can be showcased at Plaatsmaken, but also far beyond—on the streets, in jacket pockets and backpacks, in libraries, and community spaces.

People who, for various reasons, are on the fringes of the art world—those who independently create magazines and visions for change and resistance, those who find ways to laugh despite hardship, those who have developed their own words and language—will have a central place in HOHA.

Time Out / Tune In by Lenn Cox

The Time Out / Tune In program has emerged from the compost heap that Plaatsmaken has grown from, mixed with the nomadic practice of Lenn Cox and her ongoing research project Collective Wandering. This project explores self-organized socio-ecological communities and collectives—often with an (eco)feminist and queer core—born from a need for greater collectivity in the work and lives of artists and cultural workers.

In recent years, we have seen increasing interest in and necessity for collectivity in the precarious cultural field. This program connects to the cyclical nature of time, calling for slowing down. The value of time and slowness for artists and collectives is fundamental, yet it is constantly under pressure. Sometimes, slowing down seems nearly impossible, given the productivity demands required to survive in the precarious cultural sector.

Time Out / Tune In places time as a co-creator and currency at its core. It embraces the cyclical clock of the seasons, hoping to move beyond the relentless ticking of clock time. Through seasonal work, this way of thinking and working is given extra space. In intensive seasonal programs, residents at Plaatsmaken will be brought together with other makers.

Time Out / Tune In takes the household of Plaatsmaken as its focal point, examining it closely and creating intersections with the ‘households’ of other makers and organizations. Seemingly everyday actions become part of the artistic process; they shape the conditions and rhythms that make art possible. Through recurring moments, we explore how to organize collectively, what we can learn from each other, and what is at stake.

Art-making, in this context, is about setting things in motion—it moves beyond conventional standards of what art is, can be, or should look like.

Ploegendienst 1: January/February/March 2025
The results of the first shift will be showcased in the 'Lente Samenscholing' from March 17–22.

About the artists/curators:

Sunflower Soup
The art collective Sunflower Soup emerged from a shared activist commitment and a pressing need to explore what art can mean beyond the personal, isolated individual. The collective is driven by a series of vibrant questions: can working in the community promote a less passive, more participatory experience of art? How can art contribute to the politics of the everyday, where people relate to each other and to the more-than-human, planetary world? How do we reconcile the importance of activism with a poetic visual language that allows humor, paradox, and ambiguity?

Lenn Cox
Lenn Cox is a community organizer, artist, educator, and program maker. She explores solidarity economies by immersing herself in self-organized learning, working, and living environments, many with an ecofeminist and queer heart. She uses clothing and navigation maps to carry the exchanges and stories she gathers. Lenn initiates gatherings that enable collective learning. It’s an ongoing inquiry into how we organize ourselves, what we can learn from each other, and what is at stake in the cultural field and beyond.

Jaban Razdar
Jaban Razdar is in the Holy Land, supporting the indigenous population in their fight against ethnic cleansing, alongside other activists. In between, he picks up his pen to write about the Palestinian he is in love with.

Adil/Notshitprint
Print shop for social justice. Notshitprint is a non-commercial print shop for activists and grassroots projects.

Tabea Nixdorff
Tabea Nixdorff is an artist, typographer, and researcher. Her artistic practice includes (self) publishing, sound- and language-based performances, collaborative learning, and social gatherings.

Anne Krul
Anne Krul is an Afropean visual artist, poet, archivist, and activist. She was a member of Strange Fruit, an organization for young queer people with diverse cultural backgrounds (1989-2002).

Archival Textures
Archival Textures is a publication series that gives space to unlikely findings from traditional archives, local community archives, conversations, and personal collections to uncover narratives from the past that can nourish our current vocabularies of resistance and solidarity.

Abhishek Thapar (Stadsatelier Arnhem)
The Indian-Dutch theater maker and storyteller Abhishek Thapar creates visual and intimate performances at the boundary between documentary and fiction. His performance will be presented at Plaatsmaken as part of the collaborative project Stadsatelier Arnhem.

Hospitality Club
For our small-scale educational projects, we collaborate with the Hospitality Club, which consists of Mirka Farabegoli and Krista Burger. We involve local primary schools, youth, children, ArtEZ students, MBO students, and neighborhood residents.