Luleå Biennial:
Tidal Ground
17.11.2018~17.2.2019

After lying dormant for five years, Scandinavia's first art biennial is resurrected with a programme spanning a vast geographical area with art events and exhibitions in Luleå, Boden, Jokkmokk as well as in Kiruna and Korpilombolo. 37 artists will participate in this year’s edition, eight of which will contribute especially commissioned works.

The biennial will also present performances and public artworks, and arrange film programmes. In addition, an international conference on anti-fascist organisation among activists, artists and thinkers will take place towards the end of the exhibition period.

Curators: Emily Fahlén, Asrin Haidari and Thomas Hämén
Initiator: Konstfrämjandet [The People's Movements for Art Promotion]

TIDAL GROUND

Never did they know

what the conditions afford

in the darkness of winter
*

In the darkest months of the year, November through February, Sweden’s northernmost territory, Norrbotten, sees only six hours of daylight. The Luleå Biennial 2018 coincides with this period, and therefore we have taken the darkness of the region as both a necessary and generative premise for our work and thinking.

The title of the biennial, Tidal Ground, refers to the gravitational force of the sun and moon—also known as body tide—that causes the earth’s solid surface to stir in a movement parallel to that of the oceans. Light and darkness take the place of one another in rhythmic unison with the surrounding landscape.

The geographical position of Norrbotten, with its proximity to Finland and Russia, has historically made the area an active military zone. A loaded and strategic frontier from which a whole town, surrounded by five fortresses, emerged from the land to defend it against intruders. This area is rich in water, iron ore, and wood. The extraction of these resources has left deep wounds: silent rapids, gaping pits, a city collapsing into the ground. What role does darkness play in such stories?

The concept of darkness has predominantly negative connotations of fear and destruction. The biennial asks questions about what “dark times” may be said to entail: that social and political forces are also going through a period of tidal movement? Or that darkness is an ever-present condition for us to navigate? Can it, in that case, be understood as a projected space? A space that becomes one with time, where the senses are heightened and new contours may slowly become visible?

With Norrbotten’s landscape as our point of departure, and greatly inspired by its contemporary poets, a series of related exhibitions will open in Luleå, Boden, Jokkmokk, Kiruna, and Korpilombolo. Works about muted waterfalls, a fictional wilderness, and waiting for a war that fails to commence, draw parallels to similar stories in other mountains, at other riverbanks and seas. There are works that arise from particular geographies, and others that tie themselves to dreams and let go of the ground. The landscape is a stage where power and abuse play out, but also a place in which we might discover something new about ourselves. What else might we learn from the landscape, its rhythms and its tides? Can we find resistance there?

*from Linnea Axelsson’s epic poem Aednan (2018)

Lulu-journal

Lulu is how Luleå first appeared in writing in 1327, a name of Sami origin that can be translated as "Eastern Water". This is the title of the Luleå Biennial’s journal, published once a month from August 2018 through February 2019. Across seven issues, through text, image and film, readers are offered different points of entry to the biennial’s overall theme: the dark landscape. All issues take as their starting point a public artwork in Norrbotten. The Lulu journal is made by the biennial’s artistic directors and invited guest editors. It is published on the biennial’s website and can be downloaded for printing.


About Konstfrämjandet

Konstfrämjandet, The People's Movements for Art Promotion, is head and initiator of the Luleå Biennial. Since 1947, the mission of Konstfrämjandet has been to support “art for all”, ensuring that cultural activity is equally distributed across the country. Local commitment and participation has been the foundation of the organisation, but the methods and discussions have changed over time. During the last couple of years, the focus has, above all, been on the redistribution of resources and knowledge to further the accessibility of art. Konstfrämjandet works with grassroots- and nonprofit organisations as well as established art institutions to encourage a more democratic and inclusive art scene. Konstfrämjandet is a politically independent organisation divided into districts all over the country, which each consist of different groups of members. The districts look different, but are united in their strong interest in society and the arts. The members are different people’s movement groups, like unions, educational- and other associations.

Team:

Contact: info@luleabiennial.se

Emily Fahlén, artistic director
emily@luleabiennial.se

Asrin Haidari, artistic director
asrin@luleabiennial.se

Thomas Hämén, artistic director
thomas@luleabiennial.se

Sara Edström, producer
sara.edstrom@konstframjandet.se

Alice Söderqvist, coordinator
alice@luleabiennial.se

Aron Kullander-Östling, graphic design
Stina Löfgren, graphic design
Julia Novitch, web development

Partners:

Financial support:

Region Norrbotten
Luleå municipality
Svenska Postkodstiftelsen
The Swedish Arts Council

Lulu is how Luleå first appeared in writing in 1327, a name of Sami origin that can be translated as “Eastern Water”. This is the title of the Luleå Biennial’s journal, published once a month from August 2018 through February 2019. Across six issues, through text, image and film, readers are offered different points of entry to the biennial’s overall theme: the dark landscape. All issues take as their starting point a public artwork in Norrbotten. The Lulu journal is made by the biennial’s artistic directors and invited guest editors. It is published on the biennial’s website and can be downloaded for printing. Design: Aron Kullander-Östling & Stina Löfgren. Translation: Kristian Vistrup Madsen.