Karolin Tampere

“Wild Living Marine Resources Belong to Society as a Whole” included as part of Lofoten International Art Festival:

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What can laws and management tell us about the relationships we have to nature and to our surroundings? Taking Section 2 of the Norwegian Marine Resources Act as a starting point, the essays, articles, images, artworks and poems in this book relate to and discuss our management of natural resources and our fundamental views on nature.

Parts of this legislative text has also given the book its title: Wild Living Marine Resources Belong to Society as a Whole, edited by Randi Nygård & Karolin Tampere.

Excerpts from this upcoming book have been included as part of I Taste the Future, the Lofoten International Art Festival curated by Milena Høgsberg and Heidi Ballet in Henningsvær, Norway. Contributions from the book as well as recorded conversations concerning this law, conducted in Tromsø, were displayed on a table in the Fredriksenbruket Archive, alongside a selection of other curatorial research on the topic of Oceans and Laws.

Ocean Seminar on Røst

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Image: The Carta Marina (1539) by Olaus Magnus.

Røst, Lofoten, Norway/ Sapmí.
June 27th – July 1st, 2017

A four day ocean seminar hosted by Røst AiR, where artists and scientists speak about their research and work which is directly connected to the ocean in one way or another. From the perspective of nature science, political science and a variety of artistic methods and expressions.

From Ensayo#4 Randi Nygård contributed a presentation about her work and the upcoming book Wild Living Marine Resources Belong to Society as a Whole, and Søssa Jørgensen showed her performance video Ættesang / Song of Kin for the Gold of the Ocean.

OCEAN SEMINAR Vol.1
There are several reasons why Røst AiR wish to engage in a multidisciplinary gathering to exchange work and knowledge concerning the ocean and it´s marine ecology. With our location on the island Skomvær, surrounded by the North Atlantic sea, it is hard to overlook. The world’s largest known deep water coral reef is located in the Røst archipelago and is among the richest habitats we have. Røst is also home to one of Northern Europe’s largest pelagic seabird colonies situated in the Nykan nature reserve. However the seabird populations are in a crisis and have been struggling along since the Atlantic Herring population collapsed in the 60´ies. Pollution, badly managed fisheries, and climate change are all impacting the seabirds current situation, both here on Røst and in the far away places they spend their winters. And as the story goes with most other circumpolar seabird colonies, year after year with decline in population, colonies and eventually bird mountains become silent. To take one example, Vedøya, Europes most extravagant and lively birds mountains, had in 1980, after years of decline, still an impressive breeding colony of 22000 pairs of Kittiwakes and 12000 pairs of Guillemots, as well as numerous Puffins and Razor Bills. in the spring of 2017, it is empty. This is climate change in practice, and the air mirrors the sea. The Røst archipelago is also situated amidst a grand economic and geopolitical battle which concerns the oil drilling in Lofoten, Vesterålen and Senja and the struggle to end the Norwegian oil age. Røst AiR is an artist run AIR initiative and communal workshops, founded in 2012. Since the summer of 2013 members of the Røst AIR working group and our guest artists have lived out with this wild landscape on the island of Skomvær and it´s 150 year old lighthouse station. Every summer we have invited different scientists to join us to share their work with us so that we slowly build up our knowledge about the ecosystem surrounding us, and how we can gradually learn to live more sustainable. Being out in this grand, open landscape, one learns to understand how vulnerable it actually is. They say we know more about the surface of the moon than of our deep oceans. So we invite you to join us this summer at Røst for a four day ocean seminar, where artists and scientists will speak about their research and work which is directly connected to the ocean in one way or another. From the perspective of nature science, political science and a variety of artistic methods and expressions.

PROGRAM:
“The Mysteries of the Sea” by marine biologist Henning Røed and Marie Kaada Hovden.
“From petroleum exploration licences at Røst to the ice edge in the North: Political geographies and material practices” by Berit Kristoffersen
“Herring in oil” The history of the fisheries and Oil vs. fish by marine biologist Henning Røed
Conversation with local fishermen
Artist Talk: Whales and Dolphins in the Vestfjord by Heike Vester
Artist Talk: Whale Music and the Pull of the Ocean by David Rothenberg
“The Invisible Helpers: Plankton” A workshop where we will collect zooplankton and study their sizes, shapes, colours, and behavior. Followed by a conversation with marine biologist Camilla Svensen
Artist Talk: “Conversations i Sáivu” by Ragna Grønstad
Artist Talk: “Wherever the Ocean Takes Me” by Maja Nilsen
“The air mirrors the sea” By Tycho Anker-Nilssen, Biologist specialised on seabird ecology.
Artist Talk: Soundscape Røst
Skype session with Randi Nygård
Video performance Ættesang / Song of Kin for the Gold of the Ocean by Søssa Jørgensen
Artist Talk: Bodies of water: Cal Harben
Conversation between Elin Már Øyen Vister and Cal Halben

Curator and producer: Marie Kaada Hovden.
With curatorial input from: Elin Már Øyen Viser, Berit Kristoffersen, and Eva Bakkeslett.
Thanks to Jason Rosenberg and Cal Harben.

Open House – Exhibition in the Artist Cabin

During Randi Nygård and Karolin Tampere´s stay as artists in residence in the scientist village Ny-Ålesund in Spitsbergen, they got an request from the local Air traffic controller to make an exhibition. Taking on this challenge they invited residents and scientists of the town to an mini-exhibition of their ongoing work. Drawings, research books, found objects and a sound collage compiled from their work in the area were installed inside their wooden small cabin.