The Not Surprised Collective requested deploying Ahmet Öğüt’s Bakunin’s Barricade from the Stedelijk Museum, in June. They felt compelled to bring the voice of the visual arts to the resistance that other fields were already showing against the ongoing genocide. Purchased in 2020, the work has since been kept in storage, in waiting. But the barricade began to live a life of its own, caught in the crossfire of political discourse. Its sudden relevance sprang from stylistic similarities to student encampment for Palestine constructions from May 2024, and from its conceptual beauty—a barricade designed not only as a symbol but as something deployable, to be used in moments of social transformation, via the contract that accompanied it.