Photo Artwork by Marja Helander. A view of a factory in Kiruna, Sweden, Smoke rises from several chimneys.

Welcome to the opening of “Is This North?”


17:00
Hvelfing
Free entry
Welcome to the opening of “Is This North?” January 25th at 17pm.

What are the boundaries and delimitations of “The North”? Where do we find the borders of the Arctic? What characterizes those who call the Arctic their home? Is their work always inherently influenced by this connection to a Nordic home? The group exhibition delves into these questions, presenting work by artists from the far-reaching North. Exhibiting artists include Gunnar Jónsson, Anders Sunna, Máret Ánne Sara, Inuuteq Storch, Nicholas Galanin, Dunya Zakharova, Marja Helander, and Maureen Gruben.

The homes of the participating artists include the Sami regions of Finland, Norway and Sweden, Iceland, Greenland, Siberia, Alaska, and Canada. The exhibition focuses on the experience of living in the far North, which communal and connective aspects can be found within artists who call the Arctic their home? Expanding the reach from Alaska to Siberia and Scandinavia in between, these vastly different cultures and communities share this one common thread: the Arctic, the North.
The exhibition was on view in Akureyri Art Museum in 2024 and is now exhibited in the Nordic House Reykjavík in a slightly modified form. Thank you to Akureyri Art Museum, The Museum Council Of Iceland, Frame – Contemporary Art and Nordisk Kulturfond. Curators: Daría Sól Andrews and Hlynur Hallsson.
Access to Hvelfing exhibition hall is via stairs on the outside and with an elevator from the atrium. A ramp leads to the front door from the parkinglot, an automatic button opens the door. The elevator is on your right when you enter the atrium. Accessible restrooms are on the main floor.