Groundings.
2023
By: Nanna Elvin Hansen in collaboration with Eliza Bożek (sound recording and design), Halfdan Mouritzen (animation), George Chiper-Lillemark (color grading)
Presented at: O_Overgaden, Institut for Samtidskunst, 2023
External website: https://overgaden.org/exhibitions/nanna-elvin-hansen
Exhibition publication: https://overgaden.org/publications/groundings
Exhibition seminar: https://overgaden.org/events/seminar-extractivism
For her first grand-scale institutional show, Hansen has created the major new film and sound installation Groundings, collaborating with sound artist Eliza Bożek, among others. Based on long-term research on the quartzite quarry at the Giemaš mountain in the Sápmi region of northern Norway, Hansen’s investigation digs into questions of the manmade structures that control Earth’s raw materials and ground—hence the title Groundings. How technology amplifies the mapping, analysis, extraction, and profitability of natural resources and how the core resources employed in these new technologies and shifting geopolitics are the Earth’s raw materials themselves (just think of the chip in your smartphone).
In the main space of the exhibition the quartzite stone is the focal point of an engulfing audiovisual collage. Following the stone as a material witness to the extraction cycle, three grand screens transport the visitor from quartzite to silicon carbide to optical mirrors; from sailing around the quarry at the mountain Giemaš by boat and entering the quarry (right, grand upright screen) via a drone view of migrating reindeer tracks where the company is planning to expand the quarry (grand screen on ground), to a close up of the artist and Bożek’s hands sorting quartzite, silicon carbide, and optical mirrors (left, smaller upright screen). Hansen thus creates a material cross-section of the globally controlled extraction of resources and related questions of consequences for the local ecology, the indigenous population, economic profit, and a wider industry of transnational (satellite) surveillance. The quartzite becomes a point of departure for a forensic and poetic journey, considering how this stone can bear witness to geopolitical exploitation. The exhibition thus asks who—human or non-human—gets to pose political demands and control a landscape?
Groundings.
2023
By: Nanna Elvin Hansen in collaboration with Eliza Bożek (sound recording and design), Halfdan Mouritzen (animation), George Chiper-Lillemark (color grading)
Presented at: O_Overgaden, Institut for Samtidskunst, 2023
External website: https://overgaden.org/exhibitions/nanna-elvin-hansen
Exhibition publication: https://overgaden.org/publications/groundings
Exhibition seminar: https://overgaden.org/events/seminar-extractivism
For her first grand-scale institutional show, Hansen has created the major new film and sound installation Groundings, collaborating with sound artist Eliza Bożek, among others. Based on long-term research on the quartzite quarry at the Giemaš mountain in the Sápmi region of northern Norway, Hansen’s investigation digs into questions of the manmade structures that control Earth’s raw materials and ground—hence the title Groundings. How technology amplifies the mapping, analysis, extraction, and profitability of natural resources and how the core resources employed in these new technologies and shifting geopolitics are the Earth’s raw materials themselves (just think of the chip in your smartphone).
In the main space of the exhibition the quartzite stone is the focal point of an engulfing audiovisual collage. Following the stone as a material witness to the extraction cycle, three grand screens transport the visitor from quartzite to silicon carbide to optical mirrors; from sailing around the quarry at the mountain Giemaš by boat and entering the quarry (right, grand upright screen) via a drone view of migrating reindeer tracks where the company is planning to expand the quarry (grand screen on ground), to a close up of the artist and Bożek’s hands sorting quartzite, silicon carbide, and optical mirrors (left, smaller upright screen). Hansen thus creates a material cross-section of the globally controlled extraction of resources and related questions of consequences for the local ecology, the indigenous population, economic profit, and a wider industry of transnational (satellite) surveillance. The quartzite becomes a point of departure for a forensic and poetic journey, considering how this stone can bear witness to geopolitical exploitation. The exhibition thus asks who—human or non-human—gets to pose political demands and control a landscape?