Post-Capitalist Architecture TV, Part 1
Post-Capitalist Architecture TV is a digital TV series featuring renowned Tromsø artists Joar Nango…
Creating
Indigenous Sovereignty
Possible Futures
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Broadcasting from the Mercedes Sprinter he once drove from Tromsø to Athens as part of his participation in documenta 14, this is an episode on the road, looking at migration, relocation and the nomadic. The car will later play an important role in the work towards the exhibition—and in the exhibition itself—in Bergen. The episode includes conversations with anthropologist Dimitris Dalakoglou (VU University Amsterdam), archeologist on the contemporary Thora Petursdottir (University of Oslo), artist/lawyer Ande Somby from Tromsø, car-mechanic Lan Paulsen and artist, composer, filmmaker and producer Elle Márjá Eira.
Credit
The first three videos in the Post-Capitalist Architecture series were produced by Bergen Kunsthall as part of the official festival program for the Bergen International Festival in May 2020. COURTESY THE ARTISTS.
This story is part of the Norway Partner Spotlight. View more content from the Spotlight here.
We, the hosts and organizers of Arctic Arts Summit 2022, recognize and respect the many languages of the circumpolar region. The core information on this site is presented in English and French, Canada’s two official languages, as well as in Inuktut, the most widely spoken Indigenous language in the North of Canada, and Southern Tutchone, one of the many First Nation languages in Yukon and the language of the nations on whose territory the in-person Summit will be hosted. The discursive and artistic content on this platform will be available in the language in which it was submitted and/or created.
We acknowledge the predominance of English on the site. This is, in part, a reflection of the use of English as a widely understood language throughout the circumpolar region today. We will, however, encourage and actively seek to include content that reflects the many languages of the North.
View in French | View in Inuktut | View in Southern Tutchone
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Connection to land, territories, histories, and cultures are fundamental to our sense of who we are as peoples and societies. We honour this connection and commit to our shared journey of conciliation as we work to build an equitable, sustainable, just, and collaborative future for all.
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