New Directions May Emerge, Helsinki Biennial
View Info“As contamination changes world-making projects, mutual worlds –– and new directions –– may emerge.” – Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing
New Directions May Emerge adopts its title from a quote by anthropologist Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, who proposes learning from (the art of) “noticing”. With close attention to other people, animals, plants, the environment, data, and other entities around us, the biennial explores how we might find new ways of living in, and understanding, the world.
The biennial unfolds through multimodal acts of noticing, sensing and sense-making. Moving from humans to non-humans and between varying scales – a spectrum spanning data as the smallest scale, through to islands and speculative new worlds denoting the largest – the biennial invites audiences to consider how recognising small or otherwise invisible details might prompt possibilities to act, to imagine differently, and reconcile the impact of human intervention, environmental and technological damage.
The biennial introduces three main conceptual threads: contamination, regeneration and agency. The Baltic Sea is one of the most contaminated waters in the world, subjected to waste from regimes of violence and unregulated industrialism. Yet, Helsinki Biennial proposes new layers of productive contamination as a cross-pollination between practices and ideas. Recognising that biennials have often been founded on principles of urban regeneration, in terms of tourism and the economy, it additionally proposes how exhibitions can be a force for healing and repair. Finally, the concept of agency explores how human life, the environment and technologies can evolve together to produce new and unforeseen results.
Helsinki Biennial is an international art event that brings outstanding contemporary art to Vallisaari Island and locations around Helsinki. The second edition is curated by Joasia Krysa and takes place from 11 June to 17 September 2023. Helsinki Biennial 2023 will comprise exhibitions, a discursive and performative public programme, film screenings, publications, and an online programme. It will take place on Vallisaari Island, HAM Helsinki Art Museum and other venues and public places in the city. HAM Helsinki Art Museum is responsible for producing the biennial.
HB23’s visual and spatial presentation is a collaboration between design studio The Rodina and spatial consultancy Diogo Passarinho Studio.
The Rodina is a post-critical design studio with an experimental practice drenched in strategies of performance art, play and subversion.
D_P_S is a research-based design studio, founded in 2015 by Diogo Passarinho that studies how emotional contexts can be used to shape spatial memories. D_P_S has been commissioned to work as a spatial consultant, working closely with the curatorial team and with an ongoing relationship with The Rodina. Project team: Diogo P
2023
HELSINKI, FI
Spatial Consultancy by D_P_S
Team: Diogo Passarinho and Gonçalo Reynolds
Artists: Matti Aikio (Sápmi), Ahmed Al-Nawas & Minna Henriksson (FI), Diana Policarpo (PR), Dineo Seshee Bopape (ZA), Sepideh Rahaa (IR/FI), Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley (UK/DE), Bita Razavi (FI/IR/EE), Golden Snail Opera (Anna Tsing, Yen-ling Tsai, Isabelle Carbonell & Joelle Chevrier) (TW/FR/US), RED FOREST (UA/UK/US/MX/DE/FI/ZA), Alma Heikkilä (FI), Remedies (Sasha Huber & Petri Saarikko) (CH/FI), INTERPRT (NO), Tabita Rezaire (FR), Keiken (UK), Emilija Škarnulytė (LT), Sonya Lindfors (CM/FI), Yehwan Song (KR), Lotta Petronella with Sami Tallberg & Lau Nau (FI), Jenna Sutela (FI), Asunción Molinos Gordo (ES), Suzanne Treister (UK), Tuula Närhinen (FI), Adrián Villar Rojas (AR), PHOSfate (SH/FI), Zheng Mahler (HK)
Curatorial Collaborators: Critical Environmental Data, a research group at Aarhus University, exploring nature as data and the many possible futures that might emerge. Museum of Impossible Forms (MIF) a cultural centre located in Kontula, East Helsinki, and the coming together of communities of art and cultural workers working to build anticolonial, antipatriarchal, and non-fascist practices and futures.TBA21-Academy, a contemporary art organization and cultural ecosystem fostering a deeper relationship to the Ocean through the lens of art to inspire care and action. ViCCA @ Aalto ARTS, Visual Cultures, Curating and Contemporary Art (ViCCA), a transdisciplinary major at Aalto University’s School of Arts, Design and Architecture. A.I. Entity, created as a collaboration between HAM Helsinki Art Museum Collections, artist Yehwan Song and the Digital Visual Studies, a Max Planck Society project hosted at the University of Zurich.
Supporters: The main partners of Helsinki Biennial include Metsähallitus, S Group and Clear Channel. It is also supported by Saastamoinen Foundation. Helsinki Biennial 2023 co-commissioners include Copenhagen Contemporary, KANAL – Centre Pompidou, TBA21-Academy, and University of Zurich. With thanks to Aalto University, Aarhus University, British Council, British Embassy Helsinki, Frame Contemporary Art Finland, Liverpool John Moores University, MO.CO.ESBA Montpellier Contemporain - Ecole Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Uniarts Helsinki, and Uniarts Research Pavilion.
Photography by HAM/Helsinki Biennial/Sonja Hyytiäinen