Scandinavia
Louise Morris challenges Scandinavia's idyllic international image through the striking work of the region's radical artists.
Scandinavia rests in many minds as a liberal haven, championing equality and with a generous welfare system. So what do artists have to protest about?
Louise Morris challenges her idealised view of Denmark, Finland and Norway, exploring what lies beneath the regionβs glossy international image by examining the work of Scandinaviaβs political artists.
A curtain of reindeer skulls is suspended outside the Norwegian parliament building, swinging macabrely in the breeze. Pile oβSΓ‘pmi is the work of indigenous SΓ‘mi artist MΓ‘ret Γnne Sara, a strident artistic protest against the Norwegian governmentβs order to cull her brotherβs reindeers - something she says violates his human and cultural rights as well as jeopardising his income. Norwayβs government states that their reindeer reduction policy, culling a percentage of peopleβs herds, is aimed at preventing the overgrazing of the tundra. Yet this policy has come into conflict with the ancestral and indigenous rights of the Sami.
Danish artist Jeanette Ehlers is determined to make history mark the present with her staggering performance art piece Whip It Good which explicitly visualises Denmarkβs connection to the slave trade - a history Ehlers says is βswept under the carpetβ and not taught in schools. Whip It Goodβs raw physicality and powerfully simple imagery challenges anyone who dares efface colonial history.
Most of the artists in this programme touch on, in some way, the ghosts of injustice past and how that reverberates into the present if it is not acknowledged - offering salient lessons for any region seeking to build a more just future.
Executive Producer: Sarah Cuddon
Written and produced by Louise Morris
A Curtains For Radio production for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4