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1 juin 2008

"Arctic Hysteria: New Art from Finland" au P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, NY

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Anni Rapinoja, International Shoes, 2007, Red Worthleberry. Courtesy the artist.

NEW YORK.- P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center presents Arctic Hysteria: New Art from Finland, an intergenerational and interdisciplinary exhibition featuring 16 Finnish artists who will introduce New York audiences to outlandish visions of aliens, utopias, animals, and psychedelia. Arctic Hysteria will be on view in the First Floor Galleries, Café, and Boiler Room from June 1, 2008 through September 15, 2008. In conjunction, Warm Up will present two major Finnish bands Jimi Tenor and Op:l Bastards on August 23. On September 15, The Museum of Modern Art will present a special screening of Electric Forest, a compilation of historical and contemporary Finnish video works.

Built especially for the exhibition, the Futuro Lounge is conceived as an homage to Matti Suuronen’s 1960s design of the legendary Futuro House, and serves as a screening room for videos and documentaries. In the Corner Gallery, the severe and breathtaking installation by sculptor Markus Copper invokes the tragic sinking of the Russian submarine Kursk in 2000. An ice breaker, blinding snowscape, and a choir of twenty men together compose a documentary of the Screaming Men’s world tour. In P.S.1’s mysterious Boiler Room, Veli Granö’s films introduce eccentric individuals who are obsessed with outer space and the paranormal. Tea Mäkipää’s 60-foot long photographic collage, World of Plenty, is an ambitious depiction of a utopian landscape. A newly composed sound piece by Sami Sänpäkkilä accompanies this installation. In Mäkipää’s latest video, the artist literally presents the world from a reindeer’s perspective, by attaching a camera to its antlers. Nature also plays a central role in Anni Rapinoja’s “couture pieces” where shoes, coats and hats are made from leaves and willows.

For their U.S. debut, the Pink Twins present a room of psychedelic video and sound pieces derived from various digital sources. Stiina Saaristo’s black-and-white drawings combine overtly masculine and feminine body parts to challenge the genre of self-portraiture. Mika Taanila’s film on Erkki Kurenniemi, a pioneer in electronic music, juxtaposes Kurenniemi’s musical instrument DIMI-S and his swearing robot Master Chaynjis. Tellervo Kalleinen & Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen present a compilation of Complaints Choir performances, and will develop a new piece during a workshop on June 8. Also on view is a tragicomic video diary of the dancer Reijo Kela, and two videos by the internationally renowned artist Salla Tykkä. Ilkka Halso’s giant fantasy photographs, which suggest the union of the natural landscape and built environment, are presented in the Café and Lobby.

Alanna Heiss has organized numerous international exhibitions, including Dennis Oppenheim: Selected Works 1967-1990 which toured Finland in 1993. Marketta Seppälä is a distinguished contemporary art curator who has organized exhibitions worldwide, and worked with Ms. Heiss when she brought the ambitious international exhibition Animal. Anima. Animus to P.S.1 in 1999.

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Pekka Jylhä, Trembling and honoring, 2005, Stuffed hare, motor, milk, glass, tremble, 60cm x 50cm x 30cm. WAM / Turku City Art Collection. Photo by Jussi Tiainen.

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