WERKER COLLECTIVE
A GESTURAL HISTORY OF THE YOUNG WORKER, PRINT PUNCH
10 May – 25 May 2024
Amsterdam
A Gestural History of the Young Worker, Print Punch (2023) is a series of double-sided screen prints conceived as a fundraiser to support the maintenance of the collective, its archive and its expanded community. The series was created during Werker’s Public Research Residency: On Erasure and Invisible Labour at Looiersgracht 60 in Amsterdam in March 2023. It has been produced as an on-going research into alternative economic models in the art world to support collaborative art practices. The conversation surrounding this model is based on fair remuneration and redistribution of resources for artists, communities, collectors and galleries and takes in consideration the larger ecology in which collaborative art practices function in the art world. Accompanying the launch of the publication Werker 2 — A Gestural History of the Young Worker (2023), co-published with Spector Books, 30 numbered and stamped copies of the publication are distributed together with an original artwork by Werker Collective.
Together with the presentation of the series of artworks Print Punch (2023), the audio work A Gestural History of the Young Worker, Condition report (2023–Ongoing) is on display at the gallery. Condition report displays the unassembled elements of the original installation on the gallery floor. The separate elements of the installation reference the act and formation of a condition report, a process undertaken after each exhibition or transport of an art object into a new space. The sound installation is based on transcribed conversations surrounding experiences of the artists as queer workers under challenging conditions of labour and censorship, since the first conception of the artwork in Yekaterinburg (Russia) in 2019 until its most recent presentation at Gropius Bau in Berlin (Germany) in 2023.
*in collaboration with Georgy Mamedov.
Taking inspiration from Der Vereinigung der Arbeiter-Fotografen (the association of worker photographers), a group of politicised photo-clubs that emerged in Germany in the 1920s, WERKER follows in the footsteps of the first socialist photography experiments in the USSR, which extended to Europe, the United States, and Japan. Their methods revolved around self-representation, self-publishing, image analysis, collective authorship, and counter-archiving.
Under the name WERKER COLLECTIVE, they engage in producing media from below with students, cultural workers, self-organised unions of domestic workers, undocumented migrants, in support of anti-eviction activists, feminist groups, LGBTQ+ communities, and people with neurological or functional diversities. Through these workshops, WERKER COLLECTIVE weaves an intersectional and transnational network of allies, reactivating oppressed histories, and investigating worker's solidarity through collaborative artistic practice.
Since its foundation, WERKER COLLECTIVE has collaborated with numerous artists, activists, researchers, and unions on various projects in schools, museums, and archives. These collaborations form WERKER's ecosystem, including Activestills, Ariella Aïsha Azoulay, Casco Art Institute: Working for The Commons, Centre Culturel Populaire Palentes Orchamp (Groupes Medvedkine), Centro de Arte 2 de Mayo, Der Arbeiter-Fotograf, Dutch Art Institute, Georgy Mamedov, International Institute of Social History, Jo Spence Memorial Archive, Manifesta 14, Silvia Federici, Mayday Rooms, Mokum Kraakt, Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona, Niet te Koop, Photography Workshop, Rijksakademie van Beelende Kunsten, Sindillar: Sindicato de Trabajadoras del Hogar y los Cuidados, S.M.A.K, Susoespai: Creació i Salut Mental, Stedelijk Museum, Steve Edwards, Sonsbeek 20–24, Tate Modern, The Showroom, The Voice of Domestic Workers, and We Are Here.