This exhibition focuses on indigenousness and questions of representation. It points to problems such as racism and ethnic exploitation, and shows that they are not remote problems in former times or other continents. Acclaimed indigenous and non-indigenous artists and academics from as different places as India, Canada, Nigeria, Greenland, New Zealand and Sapmi will meet.
Indigenous Rights and Multicultural Realities
A deserted locomotive engine shed in the woodlands of Rovaniemi - the gateway to the
Sami homeland area Sapmi - will soon become the stage for an international art
project on Nordic colonialism.
Taking its cue from local interests within Sa'mi culture and politics, the exhibition
Colonialism Within: Indigenous Rights and Multicultural Realities and a concurrent
conference at the Arctic Centre will rethink the colonial history and its
present-day ramifications in the Nordic region from an indigenous perspective.
Acclaimed indigenous and non-indigenous artists and academics from as different
places as India, Canada, Nigeria, Greenland, New Zealand and Sa'pmi will meet in
Rovaniemi. They will discuss such issues as the right to land and resources,
representation and agency, the myth of indigenousness, the state and the
environment, women’s interests, sexuality, and race. In doing so, they put special
attention to indigenous interests in the age of globalization and the current global
economy.
Both the exhibition, which includes a comprehensive film program, and the conference
will address indigenous concerns as a sort of colonialism within and hence question
dominant ideas of colonialism as something remote in time and space that has already
been sufficiently historicized.
A Bigger Project
The happening in Rovaniemi is part of the ambitious exhibition project, Rethinking
Nordic Colonialism, which was launched earlier this year by NIFCA, Nordic Institute
for Contemporary Art. The curators, Kuratorisk Aktion (a.k.a. Frederikke Hansen and
Tone Olaf Nielsen), hope to provoke new discussions on Nordic imperialism past and
present by providing a unique platform for discussions combining art, activism,
politics, and academic work.
Rethinking Nordic Colonialism is divided into five acts and presents 56 participants
from all over the world. The first act opened in Iceland in March, where artists,
theorists, and activists discussed the widely forgotten history of Nordic
colonialism. Staged in Nuuk in April, Act 2 took this discussion one step further by
looking into current problematics in contemporary Greenland and other de-colonizing
societies. The Faroe Islands provided the context for Act 3, during which artists
and performers discussed how colonial dynamics operate on body and mind. Act 4 will
now look at colonialism within, giving artistic and intellectual attention to
indigenous interests in the global economy.
Opening up discussions to an appropriate global investigation, Rethinking Nordic
Colonialism brings people with similar interests but lacking knowledge of each other
together in the “peripheries" of the Nordic region and represents a first
postcolonial attempt at writing a collective history of colonialism in the region.
All these critical voices are collected in a DVD Box Set, which will be published
throughout the Nordic region and the world at large at the end of the year. Bringing
the marginalized voices to the centers of power will be the fifth and final act.
The Program
For three weeks, the engine shed will be home to new artworks by Archana Hande
(India), Geir Tore Holm (Sa'mi, Norway), Kent Monkman (Cree, Canada), Katarina Pirak
Sikku (Sa'mi, Sweden), and Fatimah Tuggar (Nigeria/USA) - as well as to the film
program, Silver Screen Resistance, featuring four decades of postcolonial cinema
with Stephanie Black (USA), Randi Broberg in collaboration with Tine Bryld
(Greenland & Denmark), Laila Hansen (Greenland), Isaac Julien (United Kingdom),
Alanis Obomsawin (Abenaki, Canada), Pratibha Parmar (Kenya/United Kingdom), Gillo
Pontecorvo (Italy), and Paul-Anders Simma (Sámi, Norway/Sweden/Finland).
Following the opening on June 16, a two-day conference titled Beyond Subject and
State? Indigenous Interests in the Age of Globalization will be open to everyone
interested. Speakers are Archana Hande (India), Richard William Hill (Cree, Canada),
Rauna Kuokkanen (Sa'mi, Finland/Canada), Kaisa Raito (Finland/Swedish Sa'pmi),
Henriette Rasmussen (Greenland), and Makere Stewart-Harawira (Waitaha, New
Zealand/Canada).
Detailed information on participants, programs, locations, schedules, etc. can be
found on http://www.rethinking-nordic-colonialism.org/
There will be a free shuttle bus service for the opening night on June 16 running
from 5 - 8 pm. It leaves from Sampoaukio to VR:n Veturitalli every half hour.
Schedule online.
Opening Friday, June 16, 5 - 8 pm
VR:n Veturitalli (Finnish Railways Locomotive Engine Shed)
Rovaniemen asema-alue - Rovaniemi Finlandia