There may be an infinite visible drama to the Norwegian archipelago of Lofoten, which lies simply above the Arctic Circle, with its fjords, jagged mountains (the trolls of native legend) and fishing villages with homes painted vibrant crimson and big outside racks for drying cod. That is to say nothing of the sunshine—the aurora borealis is commonly seen on a transparent night time, and in the course of the day the consistently altering climate creates sudden rainbows and bursting rays of daylight via darkish, fast-moving clouds.
This putting panorama performs host to the longest-running modern artwork biennial in Scandinavia, Lofoten Worldwide Artwork Competition (Liaf), which marks its 18th version this 12 months (till 20 October) underneath the curatorial path of Kjersti Solbakken, who was born in close by Valnesfjord and is the brand new director of Bergen Kunsthall as of 1 October. Liaf 2024 finds its centre within the area’s administrative capital of Svolvær (inhabitants 4,700), with satellite tv for pc initiatives throughout Norway and as far-off as New York Metropolis. As a migratory biennial, every version of Liaf makes use of various out there buildings and outside areas throughout Lofoten. “Similar to codfish, it travels between the outdated fishing villages,” Solbakken writes in her introductory textual content to the biennial’s guidebook.
Cod (recognized regionally as skrei) is a gigantic a part of Lofoten’s id; it even seems on Svolvær’s coat of arms. For greater than 1,000 years, locals—and, later, complete fleets of more and more giant fishing boats from throughout Norway—have been catching the fish as they migrate from the Barents Sea across the Scandinavian Peninsula to spawn within the winter months. The cod are dried on giant racks to create stockfish, which has been a serious export since not less than the Center Ages, when it was marketed to Catholic international locations throughout Lent. (Portugal’s nationwide dish, Bacalhau, is commonly made with stockfish from Norway.)
The nationwide financial significance of cod-fishing—Lofoten locals prefer to say that the town of Bergen was constructed with cod cash—mixed with the unpredictable climate of the area to create an pressing want for higher communication throughout the islands. In consequence, 170km of undersea cables and landlines have been laid alongside what grew to become referred to as the Lofoten line (Lofotlinjen), funded by the state and accomplished in 1861. In 1903, Lofoten grew to become the second place on the earth (after Italy) to ship and obtain a wi-fi telegraph message. Three years later, the Sørvågen Coastal Radio Station started operations within the southernmost a part of the archipelago. (The primary radio station in Oslo was not created till the Twenties.) In 1914, a telegraph constructing was accomplished there, designed by Georgine (Lilla) Hansen (1872-1962), the primary feminine architect in Norway to ascertain her personal observe. The Sørvågen radio constructing now homes the Museum Nord, one of many satellite tv for pc venues of Liaf this 12 months.
“Liaf 2024 has not tried to create a theme-based exhibition, however has chosen as a substitute to make use of Lofoten’s historical past of telegraphy as a software to learn how it is likely to be potential to create a world exhibition within the far-flung area of Lofoten’s archipelago,” Solbakken writes. “In the event you search for on the sky, chances are you’ll be fortunate and see the northern lights—nature’s personal radio that additionally makes a sound. Underneath the floor of the water, the fish have been speaking with their very own Morse-like language via drumming and sonar lengthy earlier than we people have been in a position to patent teletechnological variants of those methods.”
Given each Lofoten’s lengthy historical past of communications and its breathtaking panorama’s monopoly on the visible realm, it ought to come as no shock that essentially the most memorable initiatives at Liaf 2024 contain sound.
A global neighborhood of dozens of artists gathered for the competition’s opening weekend (20-22 September), which kicked off with a parade via the streets of Svolvær, a marching band made up of native youngsters main the best way. Two New York artists introduced the artwork of phrases with them—Cuthwulf Eileen Myles wrote and browse poetry impressed by their expertise on the archipelago, whereas Kameelah Janan Rasheed’s site-specific work in Kraftholmen (a former fishing-industry mechanical workshop) interrogates written language and the elusive need for full comprehension.
Within the area adjoining to Rasheed’s work, a bunch of artists from Zambia calling themselves the Livingstone Workplace for Modern Artwork discover the “sonic corridors” between Lofoten and the previous capital of Northern Rhodesia. Liaf additionally contains the works of plenty of Sámi artists—the Indigenous peoples of the area—certainly one of whom, Elle-Hánsa/Keviselie/Hans Ragnar Mathisen, is displaying a big selection of woodcuts contained in the North Norwegian Artwork Centre and enthusiastically serenaded a big group of gathered artists, competition organisers, journalists and visitors with conventional Sámi music and music at a neighborhood dinner on 22 September.
Kraftholmen gives one of many largest venues for Liaf 2024, internet hosting artists’ talks and gatherings all through the opening weekend in addition to artmaking workshops for native youngsters all through the competition. Tucked into the varied corners of the area are a few of Liaf’s finest video and movie works. Astrid Ardagh’s On Air (2024) is a 20-minute documentary a couple of radio membership throughout Norway’s Arctic islands, with retirees who used to work on the nation’s meteorological stations speaking with each other over ham radio and utilizing Morse code. The group discovers simply how important this outdated methodology of communication will be when a Russian cyberattack coinciding with its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 results in a two-week web outage.
One other brief movie, Elisabeth Brun’s Huge Tech Blues (2024), centres on the artist’s hometown of Strengelvåg (northeast of Lofoten) and the way residents there reacted to the information that SpaceX had chosen the village’s former faculty as a website for a Starlink floor station. Satirically, it’s a story of communication breakdown throughout the enterprise of world communications networks. “Central to this exploration is the expertise of sound,” reads the venture’s description, “the hum of digital know-how, the laughter of youngsters and the sounds of climate and nature.” As Brun said in her artist discuss, individuals in Strengelvåg have been notably involved that the brand new SpaceX floor station would “make this sound, this fixed sound”. She additionally particularly thanked Alexander Rishaug, who was answerable for the sound and music in her movie.
Musical performances, extra formalised than marching bands and impromptu songs, have been additionally an enormous a part of the opening weekend programme at Liaf. The launch occasion, inside a constructing previously used for boat upkeep, kicked off with an audiovisual efficiency by Viktor Bomstad and Magnus Holmen regarding myths and historic depictions of the Sámi. The next afternoon, the musician Elise Macmillan—who was born in California however moved to Norway in 2015 to play the Hardanger Fiddle—gathered a number of different performers for a novel manufacturing in Svolvær’s Previous Methodist Church. Whereas her collaborators performed bowed devices specifically made utilizing the magnetic tape from outdated cassette tapes, Macmillan, armed with a quiver stuffed with selfmade bows of all types, took turns enjoying her personal magnetic-tape instrument and a violin. The 40-minute piece, Shocked Everytime (2024), variously evoked gusts of wind, the beeping of Morse code, radio static and different sounds of the area—maybe even the aurora borealis? (Each Bomstad and Macmillan will carry their sound items throughout the Atlantic to The Kitchen in New York for the satellite tv for pc exhibition Strains of Distribution, which opens on 21 November. Rasheed’s work may also be on show, as will a bit by Wong Package Yi.)
Probably the most formidable venture of Liaf 2024 sought to remodel certainly one of Lofoten’s smaller islands right into a musical instrument. Island Eye Island Ear (IEIE, 1974-2024) is a venture 50 years within the making, initially devised by the late experimental musician David Tudor (1926-96)—a pianist and organist who was maybe most well-known for premiering John Cage’s 4′33″ (1952), during which the musician takes to and sits on the stage for the allotted time with out making a sound in order that the “music” is created by the ambient noise of the viewers. Tudor conceived of his island venture in collaboration with the artists Fujiko Nakaya and Jackie Matisse, the dancer and choreographer Margaretha Åsberg and Billy Klüver and Julie Martin of the artwork and science collective Experiments in Artwork and Know-how (EAT)—based with Robert Rauschenberg and Robert Whitman in 1966.
Though IEIE had been “rehearsed” a number of occasions over time, Tudor died earlier than it may very well be offered in full and to his satisfaction. Liaf 2024 had the excellence of premiering the venture with assist from a few of its unique staff in addition to youthful artists led by the scholar You Nakai, who wrote a guide about Tudor. IEIE befell on the island of Svinøya, the place adventurous guests can nonetheless crawl into long-abandoned bunkers from the Second World Battle. Through the opening weekend, IEIE offered small bits of mirrors positioned throughout to replicate the panorama in novel methods, kites with lengthy tails designed by Matisse flown overhead (“portray” with assist from the wind) and the all-important sound aspect—area recordings of the island remodeled the previous 12 months and performed via audio system, melding the sounds of the entire island’s seasons into one, poetically collapsing each time and area.
As Liaf 2024’s opening weekend got here to an finish and everybody gathered for dinner and a spontaneous efficiency of conventional Sámi tunes, the clouds moved swiftly throughout the sky and thru the enormous troll mountains because the waves splashed gently towards the shore. It was too cloudy to see the northern lights, however they have been up there someplace, emitting their ever-so-subtle rustle over the radio waves.
Lofoten Worldwide Artwork Competition, Svolvær, Norway, till 20 OctoberLines of Distribution, The Kitchen, New York, 21 November-18 January 2025