A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects Jimini Hignett
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The Collection
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Number 1 Tourist Attraction
93 Kata 97
Queenie
105 Sally 117 Solace 125 Olivia 131
Sky
141 Henry 147 Maria
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects Jimini Hignett A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
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The Collection
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SNOW GLOBE (33) 2015 Snow-globe containing a woman seated in her
De Wallen covers a few blocks around the
red-lit window, with embossed lettering and
church Oude Kerk. In this area there are lot’s
the three X’s of the Amsterdam herald.
[sic] of alleys and about 300 small one-room
Packaged in cellophane box with text:
cabins. In these cabins prostitutes are offering
“#6 RED LIGHT DISTRICT ‘De Wallen’ is the
their services. The prostitutes seduce passers-by
biggest and best known red-light district in
from behind a window or glass door, usually
Amsterdam. This red-light district is located in
decorated by red lights.”
the oldest part of the Amsterdam city center.
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
FRIDGE MAGNET (1) 2015 The woman on this magnet is smiling and kicking her legs joyfully in the air in a pose somewhat reminiscent of the iconic images of can-can dancers in Parisian cabarets. The design thus links the idea of prostitution to a sense of harmless, jolly entertainment, with a traditional precedent.
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< FRIDGE MAGNET (16) 2015 By combining a prostituted woman with a wooden clog – a popular symbol of the Netherlands – prostitution can be presented as something equally quaint and old-fashioned. The relative sizes make it appear as though the woman is in a kind of clog boat, and this representation may jog nostalgic reminiscences innocence. FRIDGE MAGNET (8) 2015 Detailed Red Light District brothel with distinctive bell gable. In the foreground a pair of dogs can be seen copulating on the pavement, the implication being that having sex is as irrepressible an impulse for men as it is for animals, and that this is something entirely natural and
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of childhood games, generating an air of
uncontrollable. On an upper floor, a pole dancer and a lap dancer are performing for a room full of men. Women engaged to work as ‘erotic’ dancers’ report being under great pressure to provide sexual services, particularly as, rather than being receiving a wage for their dancing, they are frequently expected to pay a fee in order to work in the club, on the assumption that their income (and the fee) will be earned from ‘tips’ for sex.
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FRIDGE MAGNET (9) 2015
> FRIDGE MAGNET (4) 2015
‘Sex Shop’ magnet. Two of the prostituted
Shows a group of four women, suggesting a
women are portrayed passively waiting for
camaraderie that is in fact absent between
clients on a red sofa indoors. In reality, women
women prostituted in Amsterdam’s Red Light
need to actively hustle for sex buyers as, at the
District, where the reality is that restrictive
going basic rate of € 30,-, they need to allow
window space, competition for customers, often
themselves to be fucked by a large number of
combined with strict orders from their pimps
men even just to pay the rent of windows and
not to talk with other women, ensures a lack of
cabins, which on average cost € 150,- /
strength through solidarity. All the women
€ 160,- per evening shift.
portrayed are white, and predominantly blond.
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This reflects the preponderance of women from Eastern Europe, who make up over 90% of the women in the windows. The woman in the pink bikini is cradling her slightly swollen belly with her arm – pregnancy can be a factor in prompting women to exit prostitution or to leave their traffickers, who frequently enforce abortions.
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FRIDGE MAGNET (85) 2018
FFRIDGE MAGNET (183) 2019
The women on this magnet appear completely
Magnet in the form of a giant clog decorated with
unclothed. Generally, the women on display in
a classic Dutch windmill, hearts and the word
windows wear at least a minimum of clothing.
‘Holland’, and with a woman, naked except for
These women’s splayed-lips and unnatural
her traditional Dutch lacy bonnet, sprawling
looking, improbably large breasts suggest that
across it, her bare buttocks provocatively raised.
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they had plastic surgery.
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A significant number of women in prostitution
FRIDGE MAGNET (6) 2015
have undergone breast enlargement, often
The group in matching yellow tracksuits parading
forced by their pimps on the premise that they
past this brothel is a team of Chinese acrobats
will thus earn more money. The cost of the
performing a dragon dance. The Red Light
surgery then has to be paid back through
District overlaps Amsterdam’s Chinatown, the
the woman’s earnings. Some traffickers are
locus of historical links between prostitution and
known to take women to Belgium where the
drugs – Chinatown was the area where drugs, in
limit on the size of the implants is less restric-
particular opiates coming from Asia, were
tive. As the women appear to be almost
traditionally purchased. An addiction to these
identical, it could also be that they do not,
drugs has, for generations, created a desperation
in fact, represent real women but rather,
causing women to sell their bodies for sex.
inflatable plastic dolls.
It is worth noting that within the ‘hierarchy’ of prostituted women, those suffering from drug
FRIDGE MAGNET (172) 2019
addiction tend to be at the bottom end of the
On the gable of this magnet is a giant sized
scale, receiving both the lowest remuneration for
woman wearing a black bikini along with a
their services as well as the least sympathy from
traditional lacy bonnet such as is still worn by
society. They are seen as ‘guilty’ and complicit in
some women in various villages to this day.
their own exploitation, and placed at the
The woman is portrayed with particularly large
opposite end of the scale to ‘innocent’ victims
hands, which may indicate a background in farm
– those trafficked into prostitution through
work beyond the boundaries of the city. In the
emotional or physical force. A large number of
past, a significant number of the women who
women who may not have been drug users prior
ended up in prostitution had come from the
to entry into prostitution, become dependent on
countryside to Amsterdam, where they were left
the use of painkillers or other drugs, taken in
without the support of family or parish members
order to cope with the mental and physical
to help them in times of hardship.
trauma caused by the work.2
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FRIDGE MAGNET (13) 2015 This ‘Sex Shop’ magnet is decorated with coloured tulips growing outside. Tulips are a main tourist attraction in the Netherlands and provide significant revenue, as does the prostitution industry. Exact figures are difficult to ascertain but the figure quoted most frequently is that 5% of the GNP of the Netherlands comes from the sex industry (this includes related income such as sex-tourists’ use of taxi services and hotels). This would appear to be a greater amount than the profits generated by the drug trade, and superseded only by arms industry revenue.3 > FRIDGE MAGNET (5) 2015 The interesting persiflage of elements on this The How to go on Series
magnet bestows a sense of historical authenticity, but is incorrect in terms of actual location. The row of gables supposedly representing the Red Light District, includes both a windmill with nationalistic coloured blades and an historic monument, probably the Montelbaanstoren. (This tower, built in 1516, and once drawn by Rembrandt, was also briefly 16
occupied by a support charity for LGBT Muslims, though it is unlikely that the magnet intentionally references this.) The colours of the houses portrayed are reminiscent of children’s building blocks and this idea is reinforced by the inclusion of a giant-sized, bikini-clad woman whose stature reduces the buildings to playthings, inviting the suggestion that prostitution is as innocent as children’s play.
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< FRIDGE MAGNET (7) 2015 Nostalgic, architecturally detailed gable with cast iron wall ties, traditional double door, and stone plaque showing an elongated penis sporting feathered wings and what appears to be a red flying helmet with goggles. (In the period before literacy became commonplace, such stone plaques were used to indicate the trade of the occupants.) The middle window of this brothel magnet displays a flag with the three crosses of Amsterdam’s coat of arms. Initially the crosses may have symbolised the city’s three they came to be taken as standing for ‘valiant, steadfast, and compassionate’. Compassion seems to be sadly lacking toward women in prostitution, as much of Dutch society appears to be pragmatically complacent in its complicity with the sex industry, selectively focussing on the glossy surface of the business. This mirrors the way the Dutch government has conveniently turned a blind eye to the problems incurred
FRIDGE MAGNET (18) 2015
since the year 2000 when the Netherlands
This gable is one of very few in the collection
became the first European country to legalise
showing a dark-skinned woman present behind
brothel-keeping and pimping, both of which
a window. In the 1980s and ’90s there was a
were henceforth considered as ‘normal’
significant presence of women from Latin
professions. The fact that the United Nations
America, but since the collapse of the Soviet
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has rated
block, and the consolidation of Hungarian and
the Netherlands as a “Country of destination:
Romanian mafias, a steady supply of women
Very High”, one of only 10 countries worldwide
with EU passports from the poorest and most
with this rating – has made this policy seem
heavily misogynistic societies of Eastern Europe
dubious at best.4
have replaced them.
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dangers – fire, floods and the plague – but later
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SNOW GLOBE (35) 2016 Snow globe with glitter snow – the shiny
“how some narratives are promoted while others
glamour of prostitution. Symbolically, snow
are repressed to represent a particular version of
globes are generally seen to represent happy
history.”20
memories, perhaps evoking childhood innocence. Erica Rand however, in her analysis of souvenirs, uses the description of a snow globe purchased in a gift shop on the site of the Ellis Island Immigration Museum, to demonstrate
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SNOW GLOBE (31) 2015
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Snow-globe with prostituted woman on red
from abusive backgrounds which may give rise to
cushion. On the base of this globe there is a relief
an undervaluing of their own bodies and a lack of
showing women in underwear and heels, prone,
self-esteem which leave them vulnerable to
in what appears to be an outdoor setting, on the
exploitation. In film and literature snow globes have
pavement in front of a brick wall â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a stark
also been used as metaphors to evoke dark, sinister
reminder of the rape fantasies that are encour-
events. Best known is probably the 1941 film,
aged by the porn industry, and the statistics
Citizen Kane, where a snow globe shatters when it
showing that many prostituted women come
slips from the hand of the dying protagonist.
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SNOW GLOBE (32) 2015
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This snow-globe appropriates typical Dutch
has leaked out. Perhaps the little Dutch boy
figurines portraying a boy and girl in traditional
should have concentrated on keeping his finger
costume with wooden shoes, leaning forward to
in the dyke instead of going to visit the Red Light
kiss with their hands behind their backs. Here,
District.
although the couple still kiss and the boy still holds a bunch of flowers behind his back, the
> SNOW GLOBE (140) 2019
model of the girl in traditional costume with
This small snow globe contains three houses,
striped skirt and lacy headgear has been replaced
one which has unclothed women standing at the
by the iconic figure of a prostituted woman in
red-lit windows. Behind the houses, up against
black underwear and high heels. Appropriating
the rear wall, a man, his trousers around his
the conventional image in this way sends the
ankles, is having sex with a red-haired woman.
message that prostitution is traditional, and thus
In fact, almost all legalised prostitution in the
deserves to be preserved. In debates about the
Netherlands occurs indoors, with soliciting on the
issue, the former mayor of Amsterdam, Eberhard
streets generally prohibited. In Nijmegen, one of
van der Laan, often emphasised this traditional
the few remaining officially recognised zones for
aspect and his intention to preserve it.
street prostitution is coupled with a so-called
Unfortunately all the water in this snow globe
â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;afwerkloodsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; (translates roughly as â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;finishing-up
purely pragmatic decision, as an article in the publication Tippelzone Revised concedes, “creating tolerance zones was initially purely a pragmatic decision, in order to control both prostitution and drug addiction, not an attempt to improve the lives of street prostitutes. For the public, decreased street violence and reduced visible drug dealing are the most important factors.”21 In Amsterdam, in order to reduce disturbance to the general public, street prostitution was banished to a special zone, far from the city centre, that opened in 1996 – the Theemsweg. It soon became a haven for traffickers and drug dealers and was almost exclusively populated by vulnerable drug-addicted women, mainly without official residency papers. In 2004 deputy mayor Rob Oudkerk, leader of the city’s biggest political of the women being prostituted there – women whom he would have known to be trafficked or shed’), an empty warehouse in which plywood
drug-addicted. It required extended debate before
partitions have been installed so that sex-buyers
Oudkerk was finally forced to step down.
can drive in with their cars to ‘finish up’. The
The extent of abuses occurring there led, in 2003,
signs outside, hung high on the walls presumably
to the Theemsweg site being closed by the city
to avoid derogatory graffiti, explain that, other
council, who stated that they “no longer want to
than police and health workers, entry is limited to
take direct and indirect responsibility for the inev-
“street prostitutes and their customers”. This is
itable facilitation of trafficking in women and
followed by instructions, “Drive at walking pace
exploitation.”22 This experience does not,
and follow the driving direction. Park your car in
however, seem to have deterred the council from
the finishing-off area and switch off the engine.
recently initiating, in the touristy, and therefore
Deposit waste in the bin and leave the finish-
economically lucrative, Red Light District, a
ing-off area clean. In the shed it is forbidden to:
project to purchase a series of brothels compris-
shelter or take a break; use drugs or alcohol; sell
ing 14 windows. The brothel project, which is
drugs or other goods; cause (noise) nuisance.”
supposedly run by sex workers themselves,
Tolerance zones for street prostitution (tip-
operates under the name ‘My Red Light’ and
pelzones) are frequently created distant from the
continues to profit from the ongoing support of
city centre. This is likely to be the result of a
the council.
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
party, was discovered to have been a regular user
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< ASH TRAY (43) 2016
ASHTRAY (80) 2019
Incorporating a model of an almost naked
‘Amsterdam City of Joy and Fun’
woman, prone, her hands positioned as if tied
…but for whom…?
behind her back, her legs spread-eagled, head tilted submissively back – this ashtray invites the violent gesture of stubbing out a cigarette into the woman’s crotch.
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METAL POSTCARD (145) 2019
BOX (90) 2018
This embossed tin postcard with red, white and
Plastic box decorated with reclining woman.
blue background,is illustrated with the picture of
Working all night and having to sleep during the day
a coyly posed, topless model in the style of
is another factor contributing to the social isolation
1950’s ‘saucy’ magazine illustrations, keeping
of women in prostitution, this makes them easier to
prostitution in the realm of something merely
manipulate and exploit. The black bra beneath the
naughty but harmless. Behind the woman is a
text ‘Amsterdam Redlight District’, looks curiously
contemporary photograph and the text, ‘World
like scary evil eyes – perhaps insinuating that to
Famous Red Light District Amsterdam’.
open the Pandora’s box of prostitution is to risk
The international fame of the area was espoused
possible addiction to sex buying.
in a promotional video, which for some years could 72
be viewed on the website of the Amsterdam City
> STATUETTE (36) 2016
Council, in which Eberhard van der Laan, then
One of a series of cast plastic teddy bear statuettes
mayor of Amsterdam, explains the council’s stance
depicting bears as prostituted women. This one
vis-à-vis prostitution and emphasises the
has an SM outfit which includes black thigh-length
importance of Amsterdam’s Red Light District as
boots, a whip, and a dildo. Portraying bears as
a tourist attraction, stating that he considers that
prostitutes suggests that the business is cuddly
prostitution should always be a part of the city.
and cosy and playful, a bit of harmless fun – going
“Amsterdam will always have a Red Light District,
to bed with a prostituted women is as innocent as
and it shall always be world famous.”
taking your childhood teddy to bed with you.
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Number 1 Tourist Attraction
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Jimini Hignett
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The objects collected here were sold as tourist souvenirs. They were purchased in the Amsterdam Red Light District between 2015 and 2019, mainly from gift shops, tobacconists and kiosks. Souvenirs represent a distilled image of the country they portray. They depict icons of the ‘exotic’ location which is being visited by the tourist, and are bought as a nostalgic reminder or in order to share their experiences of that place with others. In Amsterdam, on the racks of postcards, holding a prominent place alongside the windmills, tulips, clogs, canals, cows and bicycles, is the Red Light District. This area, locally known as De Wallen, has been actively promoted by the city council as a major tourist attraction, and is visited annually by two-and-a-half million tourists. Prostitution is a worldwide phenomenon that earns huge sums of money selling access to (predominantly) women’s bodies for (almost exclusively male) sexual pleasure. Since the sexual revolution of the 1960/70’s, the sex-industry has needed to counteract a change in attitude toward (the) female (body’s) autonomy. A moral stance toward prostitution had become no longer tenable, and the centuries-old assumption of male privilege and entitlement was under fire. The idea my-own-body’ prostitute, perfectly fitted the sex-industry’s agenda, as they were able to make perversely clever use of the feminist principle of female autonomy whilst protecting their own interests. Of the collected souvenirs, almost half are fridge magnets. A fridge magnet can be seen as the epitome of banal domesticity, and the sale of these Red Light District magnets helps to instil the idea that paid sex is as innocuous as a kitchen sink, and, as the kitchen is traditionally female domain, these magnets imbue the sense that
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
of the self-reliant, strong, independent, ‘so-free-that-I-choose-to-sell-
prostitution is not only acceptable to the female population, but also homely and inoffensive. The collection also includes a number of snow globes. Such snow globes have been in existence as souvenirs since the early 19th century. They present a sanitised miniature, a ‘harmless’ version of reality, with the ‘inhabitants’ of the globe compressed, imprisoned, and unchanging. Several objects were purchased from the Prostitution Information Centre (PIC) – a prostitution-positive organisation which – as we can read on the website of the Amsterdam City Council, “played an important part
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in the change of the Dutch laws regarding prostitution.” The PIC is also behind the placing of the statue of Belle, a small, bronze ‘Sexworker Monument’, on the Oudekerksplein. This statue portrays a prostituted woman standing in a door frame, her attitude that of a strong, selfsufficient, so-called independent sex worker. Tourists pose to have their photograph taken with her. The photographs throughout the second part of this book, show details of Belle Revisited, a life-sized wooden replica of that sculpture into whose body people have been invited to carve their initials and a heart – a symbolic representation of society’s complicity in the very real damage being done to women in prostitution. Zandpad Revisited, my video of people carving their initials into the sculpture was recorded at a contentious location – the planned site of the ‘New Zandpad’ in Utrecht. The old Zandpad was the location of a number of Red Light houseboats which were used for window prostitution. The city was forced to close the site in 2013, due to extreme violence and ongoing exploitation. The sex industry then campaigned to re-open the site, and consequently a patch of land has now been designated for the building of a series of new ‘windows’. Construction on the new site has, however, been delayed as the companies vying for the rights to ‘manage’ the new brothels failed to satisfy the demands of the Bibob laws pertaining to criminal activities
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such as exploitation. The sale of sex in the Netherlands has been legal, if strictly regulated, since 1811. Then, in the year 2000, the Dutch government introduced legislation to remove the prohibition on pimping and brothel-keeping. Cleverly packaged as part and parcel of a liberal, forward-thinking attitude toward sex in general, and the antipathy of prim moralising, this move corroborated the country’s dubious honour of being the torch-bearer for liberalised prostitution laws, and consolidated its 88
reputation as a centre for sex-tourism. The Dutch government, stubbornly blind to the ethically and socially disastrous results of this legislation, has, despite evidence to the contrary, insisted on emphasising the success of this approach, encouraging other countries to follow suit. In this, the government choses to side with the propaganda of the sex-industry rather than listen to other voices, such as that of former sex-trade worker Karina Schaapman, who later became an Amsterdam city councillor, “There are people who are really proud of the red light district as a tourist attraction. It’s supposed to be
such a wonderful, cheery place that shows just what a free city we are. But I think it’s a cesspit. There’s a lot of serious criminality. There’s a lot of exploitation of women, and a lot of social distress. That’s nothing to be proud of.”1 The drinking, gambling, loose-fisted, Dutch pimps, portrayed in the 1968 documentary, Rondom het Oudekerksplein [Around Oudekerksplein], have been replaced by organised groups of criminals from further afield, but in the methods used to entrap vulnerable girls – enticing them with gifts and affection then pressuring them to be prostituted, resorting to force if necessary – little has changed, other than the scale on which women are exploited. The information provided on the Amsterdam Council’s website displays the city’s pragmatically ‘down to earth’ attitude to ‘sex work’, reducing the business to a series of practical procedures, and has generally been active in promoting the ‘world famous’ Red Light District as something to be proud of. At the core of the prostitution industry, the painful, disturbing reality of a tenacious assumption of male entitlement, and of race and class privilege, is ongoing. In neighbouring Germany where similar brothels, warehouses with the capacity to cater to 1,000 sex buyers, has become commonplace. Some of these function as ‘flat-rate’ brothels, where for € 70,- customer can partake of a beer, a sausage and unlimited women. On the opening day of Pussy Club, a chain of such brothels, 1,700 men lined up to get in, and queues outside women’s rooms continued until closing time, by which point many of the women were collapsing from exhaustion and pain, suffering injuries and infections. Meanwhile, an increasing number of other European countries are now
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
legislation to the Netherlands is in place, the phenomenon of Mega-
acknowledging the extent of the violence and misery inherent in the sex trade, and are considering the ‘Swedish’ or ‘Nordic Model’ as a serious proposition for future legislation and policy. Within this alternative model, it is the buyers of sex who are criminalised, rather than those who find themselves in situations of prostitution. In the Netherlands however, the mainstream political parties continue to turn a blind eye and succumb to the manipulations of the sex-industry. The imagery presented on these souvenirs is part of the haze of subtle propaganda concerning prostitution that permeates our day-to-day
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lives. It demonstrates the way that a particular image of prostitution is kept alive in society by exerting a subliminal influence which encourages the acceptation of prostitution as an inevitable, necessary, and even desirable, form of harmless ‘entertainment’. This message glosses over the damage wreaked by the blinkered acceptance of prostitution – a world where the maltreatment, abuse and subjugation of women, endures – and insidiously promotes and reinforces the superficial, one-sided view of the prostituted woman as a strong, willing and independent ‘happy hooker’, a view which enables society (and government) to ignore the very real pain and distress that goes on behind this smoke screen. By presenting these ‘innocuous objects’ as artefacts, described and displayed like an anthropological collection – similar to the supposedly ‘curious’ and ‘savage’ customs of historic ‘uncivilised’ societies that we are accustomed to seeing displayed in such a fashion – we could perhaps imagine them relegated to the past, and envisage a future in which have moved beyond an acceptance of this outmoded, barbaric ‘tradition’. Alongside the souvenirs, a number of testimonies have been included in this book – witness to the ongoing presence of this flourishing trade. The sources of these particular testimonies, though not anywhere near
The How to go on Series
a comprehensive overview of the Dutch situation, are nonetheless varied. The majority are the product of a month spent as artist-inresidence for CBK Southeast in the Bijlmer neighbourhood of Amsterdam, during which time I met and was able to interview a number of survivors who had been trafficked into the sex industry in the Netherlands. Each of them began life in a West African country, and ended up in the unlicensed sector of the Dutch prostitution market. Their stories as they are reproduced in this book, though shortened, are taken verbatim from those interviews. Other 90
testimonies included here are taken from a series of court cases I followed over a lengthy period of time in the Amsterdam courthouse. These concern women from various countries in Eastern Europe, all of whom were exploited in the licensed sector, in the Red Light District of Amsterdam.2 One single testimony comes from a woman of Dutch origin. She talked to me for eight and a half hours in a waterfall of recollections which spread like a delta of tributaries before rejoining the main topic. For the sake of coherence, I have had to edit her interview substantially.
We had met one another at a symposium in an academic setting in Amsterdam. She had been one of the subjects of the research being presented there. During a round of audience questions, she spoke out, condemning the research, (which was slanted to provide ammunition for the pro-prostitution, decriminalisation lobby), as superficial and thus inaccurate. Her comment went something like this, “I don’t know who all you spoke to for this so-called research, because we can call ourselves lucky that we are part of the two percent who have supposedly ‘chosen’ to do this – although as I see it, forced through necessity is also forced. All those other women, you don’t get to speak to them. I can hardly find a way to exchange two words with them, so you certainly didn’t. And without their voices, this whole presentation is just nonsense.” The microphone was swiftly passed to someone else. But this comment, particularly coming as it does, from someone who still finds themselves in a situation of prostitution, hits the nail on the head – exactly whose voices is it that we are hearing when we are told that ‘sex workers’ have supposedly been included in the debate or decision-making process? It is my hope that this book contributes to a widening of the debate, by go unheard; to encourage us to question who is behind both the images we are seeing and the voices we are hearing; and to better understand “how some narratives are promoted while others are repressed to represent a particular version of history”.3 Dutch prostitution policy has carried on failing for much too long, and at a far too great a cost to the women suffering its consequences. It’s time now to step back from cosy red-light nostalgia and pathological tolerance and to determine a new course. We should be looking beyond the binary options of either punishing women who have, for whatever reason, ended
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
providing a place for the voices of a few of those others who generally
up selling the use of their bodies for sex, or else, removing all restrictions and casually allowing the prostitution industry to carry on business as usual. There is another option – the Nordic Model...
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1 | www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/winnipeg-used-to-have-its-very-own-red-light districts-1.3328605 2 | For more testimonies from people trafficked into the Dutch sex industry, see Jimini Hignett, 2014, Mulier Sacer. The How To Go On series. 3 | Erica Rand, 2005, The Ellis Island Snow Globe, Duke University Press 4 | www.nordicmodelnow.org/what-is-the-nordic-model/
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Kata
I don’t like to remember my childhood, when I do, only bad things come to mind. There, a girl… a woman… was not considered like a person… only someone to be used. A thing, to earn money, to sell. I grew up in a situation where this was not questioned. It was considered so normal that when it happened to me, it did not occur to me to fight against it. I must have been six or seven years old – at least this is the earliest time I can remember – when my grandfather started using me sexually. I started staying on the streets with my friends from school, just to avoid going home. When I was twelve I got put in a children’s home... I used to run away from there a lot, I would go to Budapest and get money from men for sex. In Hungary prostitution is a crime. But if you’re underage
Sanko used to bring me to the street at eight in the morning and I had to work until six in the evening. He came every three hours to collect the money. In exchange I got to live with him and his wife, and he gave me food and cigarettes. I was fifteen. I saw them as family. I don’t have any family of my own. My father doesn’t love me, we don’t have any contact.
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you aren’t punished.
Sanko called me his daughter and he said I had to do my best. If I earned good money from a customer he’d say, ‘Well done my good daughter’. In the beginning they were nice to me, but after that they changed… Once I was four months pregnant and he kicked me in the stomach. I had a miscarriage. An ambulance had to pick me up and take me to the big hospital. I didn’t tell them what happened, the doctors didn’t ask me. The baby had already been born, at home. I was really freaking out. It still goes through my head. When I got back from the hospital they beat me again. If I didn’t want to work, then Sanko would hit me in the face with a broom handle. They beat me a lot. If I didn’t earn enough they beat me.
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Just one day after giving birth to my daughter Maya, I already had to go to work on the street. She was very small. I only stopped working three days before the birth. I didn’t have money and Sanko and his wife said I had to keep working, ‘You don’t have any nappies, you have to go to work.’ I said I was sick but they beat me. In the end I went to work... Later I left Maya behind and went to live with my sister. I worked for her and her boyfriend as a prostitute on the street. Then just before I turned 18, a man called Tobar came, he said I had to go with him to Amsterdam. Tobar told me they had sold me to him. My sister’s boyfriend had told him that I was a nice bit of stuff, that he didn’t need me anymore and that they were sure I would be able to earn a lot for him in Amsterdam, so he had bought me. I was not happy… I was not happy that he’d paid money or that they talked about me like that... I was afraid of Tobar because I saw what kind of a man he was. Sometimes he beat me for not earning enough money but mostly the reason I was hit was that I have been using drugs or alcohol. So I deserved it... I started to use drugs because I had to work, work, work. I was physically and mentally totally finished. I had to use
The How to go on Series
something, so that I wouldn’t just break… Tobar decided I had to give him 1,000 euros a day. He didn’t care if I had to have sex without condoms, he only cared about me bringing the money back. I was only allowed to leave after closing time, at 5am. He said I had to have anal sex and to give blowjobs without a condom. I was given suppositories for the pain in my vagina and I had to keep working. You were only allowed to stay home if you literally couldn’t stand. Once I was so tired, I fell asleep in the cabin. He hit me for that. I got a broken nose... When he hit one of us, the others were sent through to the 96
bedroom. He didn’t want witnesses. I tried to run away to my sister. Other than my sister I had no-one in Hungary. Tobar came after me, and my sister’s boyfriend sold me to him again. For 400 euros. My sister told me. Tobar brought me back to Amsterdam again. He threatened that he would cut me from the corner of my mouth to my ear. He hit me… with a boxing glove, a truncheon, a baseball bat and a steak hammer. You couldn’t see the wounds because he made me kneel down and then he
hit my back and my head. I always had to go on my knees. He would say, ‘You know what to do’, then I knew I had to kneel... There was a basic rule that we weren’t allowed to talk to each other. Tobar always said, ‘How often have I told you, you aren’t allowed to talk to each other.’ I never had contact with Dutch girls. The only person I spoke to was the man renting the room. Other than my customers I had nobody, and in the beginning I only spoke Hungarian. There was nobody I could fall back on... I was just a thing, for them to use. And in the cabin the same, all that is important to the men is the cost – they always try to pay less… to make your value less. And that is what you feel, that you are not of any value. So how can you resist... you are just a thing. On the outside you have to pretend to enjoy, to smile, if not, you will not earn any money. But inside, inside you are not smiling, you are not enjoying, inside you are bleeding, you are empty. This no-one sees... and it destroys your resistance. You cannot show your true feelings, not even to yourself. You want to feel just nothing... Even you yourself try to believe in your own smile, because the reality is too hard to bear... I did think about running away but I didn’t know how. I didn’t know afraid that I wouldn’t be allowed to stay in the Netherlands, that I’d be sent home. I wanted to leave those people, but I was afraid because had nothing in Hungary. I was afraid I would end up homeless, and that I would have to work on the street again. The only person I had was Tobar... When they arrested Tobar it felt like I lost my family… but I was angry at how he treated me. When I start talking I realise what those people have done to me and to others… Looking back it was really very terrible. I am a bit angry. I’m a bit sad... I don’t know how things managed to get like this. My life is completely destroyed. I even lost my
A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects
anything. I thought about going to the police, but I didn’t dare. I was
daughter. Now I have nothing any more. 97
I always denied that I was a victim. They were like my family... But it wasn’t a nice family, I was afraid of Tobar... Not just of Tobar, but for life itself. I was afraid to lose my family and I didn’t want to be alone... I tried to leave Tobar a hundred times, I wanted to leave him… But I was in love with him.
This book is being produced as part of the
Katharina Klokau ensured smooth logistics in
installation Number 1 Tourist Attraction in the
the Amsterdam Museum.
Amsterdam Museum in 2019/2020. Firstly I thank curator, Annemarie de Wildt, and Renske de Jong of CBK Southeast, both of whom had faith in my work from the first encounter. There is also a large number of other people to whom I am extremely grateful for their support. The circumstances of the survivors of prostitution whose testimonies are included here, require that they remain anonymous. It took courage for them to share their stories, and for that my immense admiration and gratitude. Hannah Manneke and Jo Lewington warrant special acknowledgement for their intense involvement and support throughout, which has been unflagging. Marit van der Meer and Victor Levie made a huge
The How to go on Series
contribution with the design of the book.
162
Jolanda de Boer conscientiously fact-checked my texts. The following people carved their initials for Zandpad Revisited: Carlos Alberti, Simon Brod, Sam Critchley, Quinten Damen, Flint Louis Hignett, Hannah Manneke, Cecilia Mazza, Paulo Moreno, Roos Steigenga, Marinus Tenk, Pelle & Rob Vlaar. Tom Marfo, Sheetal Shah and The Bijlmer Project, and Gertjan ten Thije of Het Amsterdams Theaterhuis provided essential help with various practical matters. Text correction: Hannah Manneke, Jo Lewington, Jolanda de Boer Design: LevievanderMeer – Graphic & Exhibition Design. ©2019, Jimini Hignett. All rights reserved. No
Gabriel Piñero of La Plata, Argentina, assisted
part of this book may be reproduced without
me with the carving of Belle Revisted, and Huip
prior permission from the author.
van Dijk in Amsterdam with her re-assembly on this side of the Atlantic. Editor Hens van Rooy, cameraman Wiro Felix, and colour-correctors Ramon Coelho & Ruud de Bruyn, ensured better quality videos.
Other books by Jimini Hignett: How To Go On – making art when everything is all fucked up – 2008 The Detroit Diary (Best Swiss Book Award) – 2010
Martijn, Becky and Flint assisted on numerous
Mulier Sacer – 2013
random occasions.
If Bees Are Few (with Doris Denekamp) – 2014
To purchase these books or for more of Hignett’s artistic practice : www.HowToGoOn.com Information about the ‘Nordic Law’: www.nordicmodelnow.org/what-is-the-nordic-model/ The exhibition and this book have been made possible thanks to the financial support of
A woman smiling and kicking her legs joyfully in the air… A windmill with topless women sunbathing on each of its blades… A teddy bear in black thigh-length boots, with a whip and a dildo… A heart-shaped tattoo reading ‘The Prostitute in Me’… A pole dancer saying ‘Spin Me!’… A woman in a doorway wearing nothing but black underwear and a Christmas hat… In Amsterdam, in the souvenir shops, holding a prominent place alongside the windmills, tulips, clogs, cows, bicycles and canals, is the Red Light District. The area is actively promoted as a major attraction, and is visited annually by two-and-a-half million tourists. What are the images and objects that they take away with them, and how do these reflect the realities of life there? A woman daily forced to give blow jobs and have anal sex without a condom... A girl tricked into prostitution with the promise of an education… A man blindfolded and obliged to have sex in order to pay off his ‘debt’... A woman forced to have the largest possible breast implants… A teen-mother selling sex so as to feed her child… A Small Collection of Innocuous Objects juxtaposes the stories of survivors of the Dutch sex industry with a detailed description and analysis of each artefact in this collection. Unveiling the subliminal message conveyed by the imagery, the incongruities between the survivors’ testimonies and the world portrayed by the souvenirs, shed light on the larger links which are often ignored in the debate concerning prostitution, and open up a space for reflection on this sensitive issue.
ISBN 978-90-8223-831-0
9 789082 238310 >