KUNSTUTSTILLING
VISUALIZING ARCTIC VOICES
Welcome to one of the most comprehensive exhibitions Riddu Riđđu has ever had! Through images from the Arctic (approx. 1750-1930), the art exhibition Visualizing Arctic Voices will tell and examine the traces of indigenous people’s biographies, culture and experiences in the face of colonial actors. The exhibition builds on five years of archival work and collaboration between researchers with western and indigenous backgrounds. We can’t wait to share these amazing stories with this year’s festival audience!
See the art exhibition Visualizing Arctic Voices during this festival. Through images from Arctic (approx. 1750-1930) the exhibition will tell and examine the traces that exist of Indigenous people’s biographies, culture and experiences in the face of colonial actors.
The images are linked to Indigenous peoples, landscapes and animals in Sápmi, Kalaallit Nunaat (Greenland), Inuit Nunangat (Northern Canada) and Alaska in a period of increased colonial pressure and contact. The images are tied together by the fact that they arose in meetings between people from different cultures, and with different cultures, and with different agendas and understandings of relationships with people, animals, nature and culture. The art exhibition examines how historical images can retrieved and potentially enrich the history and culture for Arctic Indigenous people today.
In the exhibition you will encounter works by sami artists, among others Outi Pieski, Anders Sunna, Raisa Porsanger, Áillohaš/Nils Aslak Valkeapää (1943-2001) og Aage Gaup (1943-2021), as well as the Greenlandic artist Bolatta Silis-Høegh and Sugpiat antropol, curator and artist Sven Haakonson.
Visualizing Arctic Voices is a collaboration between the Arctic Voices-project, Riddu Riđđu Festivála, Centre of northern peoples and RiddoDuottarMuseat, as well as contribution from Fridtjof Nansen Institute.
The project itself has also received funding from The Research Council of Norway, The Nordic Culture Fund, Fritt Ord, NAPA – Nordic Institute on Greenland and The University of Tromsø’s equality and diversity committee.
Welcome to a journey through pictures from the Arcitc that tell forgotten and underrecognized stories to the audience! We hope that the art exhibition will contribute to good conversations about revitalization, repatriation and methods of decolonising history.
The opening of the art exhibition is on thursday 11 of july at 18:00! The exhibition is open after the main opening to 20:00, and will be available to see (during Riddu Riđđu festival):
Thursday – saturday from 10:00 – 18:00 and sunday from 10:00 – 14:00.
After Riddu Riđđu it is avaiable to see: monday – friday from 10:00 – 15:00.
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Anders Sunna, Death Means Nothing for the Colors, 2009. Sámi Dáiddamagasiidna / Sámi Art Collections, RiddoDuottarMuseat, Kárášjohka. Photo: Håkon Holmgren Gabrielsen.
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