SPIRIT LAND/VUOIŊŊALAŠ EANADAT 

Spirit Land/Vuoiŋŋalaš Eanadat is a practice-based transdisciplinary artistic research project around Sámi animated landscapes. It is an act of decolonisation in a hybrid form, composed of textile art, music and theology. Three cosmological spheres in traditional Sámi mythology – Jabbmeájjmo/Underworld, Eana/Earth, och Albmi/Heaven – are represented by monumental weavings, here set to music. Threads, different musical instruments, voices, sung and spoken words interact in a temporal cyclical performance. 

Spirit Land/Vuoiŋŋalaš Eanadat can be seen as an act of reconciliation between the Sámi and Nordic peoples. The Sámi spiritual historiography, which has been silenced, both past and present, is here given voice and is incorporated into the church space of Turku Cathedral. What was banned and hidden is now invited and embraced. The voices of the landscapes are heard anew, restored and brought to life, but also transformed into something hitherto unknown. Matter is hereby given spirit and life. The restoration process has begun. 

Spirit Land/Vuoiŋŋalaš Eanadat is part of the transdisciplinary research project Praxis of Social Imaginaries, Åbo Akademi University, Finland and is a collaboration between textile artist and archaeologist Emma Göransson Almroth, Sweden, and musician, composer and theologian Frank Berger, Finland.

Participants: Frank Berger (Hurdy Gurdy and vocals), Carolina Bjon (cello), Emma Göransson Almroth (jojk), Minna Hokka (overtone flute), Olli Liljeström (percussion), Marianne Maans (violin), Kari Mäkiranta (keyboard), Nina Nordvall Vahlberg (jojk and drum).

After the performance, we will host a dialogue session on the possibilities of restoration and reconciliation.

Performers

Emma Göransson Almroth is Swedish/Sami artist MFA, archaeologist Ph D and curator, who in her work investigates natural, cultural and spiritual landscapes over time. Her art has a strong sense of materiality, with references to archaeology and architecture. She primarily works with textile techniques and materials but also with printing. Since 2023, she the artistic director of Aerpie – Center for Contemporary Sami Art, in Stockholm, Sweden, an artist run green space in the Center of the City, centered around environmental issues, indigenous human rights and spiritual empowerment.

Frank Berger is a composer, singer, vocal coach, theologian, musician, and multi-disciplinary artist. He has performed in over 25 staged productions in opera, musical theatre and church music. As a dramatic baritone, he has recently developed into an interpreter of the demanding heldenbaritone opera repertoire. As an instrumentalist and folk musician, he plays the unusual medieval violin instrument Hurdy Gurdy. Berger has won two composition competitions in Finland and has written music for choirs, folk ensembles, and the theatre stage. His artistic approach is drawn to cross-genre expressions, bold drama, and strong, harmonically rooted melodies. His webpage is: www.frberger.com

 

 

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