Helsingin kaupunki, kulttuurin ja vapaa-ajan toimialaHelsingin kaupunki, kulttuurin ja vapaa-ajan toimiala

Helsinki Biennial opens to the public on 12 June

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The contemporary art event Helsinki Biennial will open to the public on Helsinki Day, 12 June, and continues until 26 September. The inaugural Helsinki Biennial takes place by the sea in the unique historical natural environment of Vallisaari Island. The biennial presents 41 artists or artist groups, and 75% of the artworks are entirely new and have not been on display before. The works include visual and sound art, as well as installations, sculptures, videos, films, and performances. The biennial will be organised within the limits of the Regional State Administrative Agency’s COVID-19 event restrictions.
Alicja Kwade: Big Be-Hide 2019 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Alicja Kwade: Big Be-Hide 2019 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.

The works of art on Vallisaari are placed along a marked trail both outdoors and inside historical buildings, gunpowder cellars, and empty residential buildings. One third of the works located on Vallisaari can be experienced outdoors. Some works are placed around Helsinki in locations such as HAM Helsinki Art Museum and the Helsinki Central Library Oodi. Art and events can also be experienced online.

Mayor of Helsinki Jan Vapaavuori says, “The Helsinki Biennial’s opening will be celebrated in a quite different atmosphere from what we originally planned. The biennial is a proof not only of Helsinki’s strength as an art and cultural city, but also of its determination and ambition, which guided the event’s organisation under extraordinary circumstances. It is essential for Helsinki not to stop after the COVID-19 crisis; we want to support the field of culture and art, its operators, and its ability to revive after the crisis. This is important not only for Helsinki, but also for its residents. The biennial will open to the public at a moment when art is more important than ever.”

Maija Tanninen-Mattila, the director of Helsinki Biennial and HAM, says, “We have developed the Helsinki Biennial together for years, and we are extremely happy that we can finally open it to the public. Thanks are due to the whole team, partners, and especially the biennial’s artists, who have worked tirelessly and with determination for this event. We welcome visitors to be inspired by art and nature and to recover from a challenging year.”

Art in dialogue with the island

The inaugural Helsinki Biennial’s head curators, Pirkko Siitari and Taru Tappola, have entitled the biennial The Same Sea, which reminds us that everything is interconnected and is therefore mutually dependent. This has become increasingly evident during the current ecological crisis and COVID-19 pandemic. The ecological crisis has metaphorically brought us onto the shores of the same sea, but its consequences vary from one part of the world to the next, and it affects people and various species in fundamentally different ways.

Together with a curator team, the head curators have invited 41 artists or artist groups to Vallisaari to create new site-specific artworks or to exhibit existing artworks that will engage in a dialogue with the island. Helsinki Biennial’s works deal with themes such as relationship to nature, boundaries and identities, time and change, and empathy and community.

Many of the sites on Vallisaari are incorporated as part of the artworks, transporting the viewer to different realities. Dafna Maimon turns a gunpowder cellar into a digestive system, and in Tuomas A. Laitinen’s work, a gunpowder cellar resembles an alien zone or a giant microscope. The Alexander Battery’s powder magazines, gun emplacements, vaulted cellars and spiral staircase form an inseparable part of Maaria Wirkkala’s installation. In his performance and video work, Samir Bhowmik guides participants into a journey into Vallisaari’s real and imagined infrastructures. Katharina Grosse turns Vallisaari’s old, run-down school building and its environment into a painting.

The global ecological crisis and Vallisaari’s unique nature have led many artists to explore the human–nature connection. Hanna Tuulikki explores the Finnish folkloric concept of being caught in metsänpeitto (forest cover) as a metaphor for losing one’s identity and the relationship with nature. The sound features a vocal improvisation based on traditional cow calling songs recorded on Hanna Tuulikki’s now derelict family farm. Outi Pieski and her daughters Birit and Katja Haarla’s video installation aims to re-establish humans’ broken connection with nature. Space, dance, music, and duodji – traditional Sámi handicrafts – form an entity in which separateness becomes unity.

Uwa Iduozee’s photography series depicts people who have left their native country and built a new life elsewhere. It is a tribute to those who, like Iduozee’s father, moved to Finland as adults, bringing their hopes and dreams with them.

Like an archaeologist, Inga Meldere digs up traces of life on Vallisaari from a period spanning from the 1950s to the 1970s when the island was closed to the public, and records the former residents’ childhood memories as referential paintings in abandoned rooms. Marja Kanervo’s film leads the audience into a dream-like journey into a spatial work realised in the Block A of the Pilot House. Gradually, she exposed layers of dwelling, highlighted the everyday items and traces she found, and explored light and its movement in the rooms.

Togetherness and empathy are at the core of many artists’ practices. Paweł Althamer produced two films in collaboration with Suomenlinna Open Prison. In the VR film, seven prisoners escape from their captive environment and find their way back to nature and to themselves. In the documentary about the making of the VR film, the prisoners talk about their lives, hopes, and freedom. The films’ two realities and methods of storytelling function as an exercise in empathy. Kuyngwoo Chun’s works are also created collectively. In Chun’s works, communication, listening, and being present with others – whether people or birds – are central.

Some works will be placed around mainland Helsinki. Joni Kärkkäinen and choreographer Jukka Tarvainen’s work at Töölönlahti Bay encourages viewers to interact with art through their own interpretation, being, discoveries, exploration, and movement. The idea for the work came from the divided Vallisaari: one part of the island is open to the public, and the other is not. Janet Echelman’s sculpture will rise high above the Senate Square, in the centre of Helsinki, for the month of August. It reminds us of people’s complex connections with the great cycles of time and the mechanisms of our physical world. The sculpture will include a changing colour scheme and soundscape that will come to life on 19 August, the opening day of Helsinki Festival. The 19 August event has been produced in cooperation with Helsinki Festival.

The biennial programme will unite art, the city, and its residents

The main exhibition on Vallisaari will be accompanied by live works of art as well as a number of performances, workshops, discussions, and other events. The events can be experienced on Vallisaari, in mainland Helsinki, and online, and they will be available to audiences as allowed by COVID-19 restrictions. Digital content will make the biennial more accessible and enable participation in the biennial even if a visit to Vallisaari is not possible.

The biennial programme has also been designed together with Helsinki City services, communities, and residents. One example is Helsinki Satellite Reef, a work of art to be displayed in Helsinki Central Library Oodi and on Vallisaari, for which over 3,000 city residents crocheted coral parts that were assembled as Helsinki’s own satellite reef. The work is part of Margaret and Christine Wertheim’s global-scale participatory project Crochet Coral Reef. Senior centres, schools, and other communities in Helsinki, as well as people who have participated in the crocheting events organised by libraries, cultural centres, and HAM, crocheted parts for the artwork.

The biennial will also be present at schools and playgrounds: Fifth-formers from comprehensive schools will be invited to visit the biennial as part of their cultural studies, and Helsinki City playgrounds will organise Mini Biennial workshops in the summer season.

Helsinki Biennial Inspired features art and culture events inspired by the biennial, organised by the Helsinki cultural, youth, and senior centres as well as companies and art institutions.

Read more about the programme here.
See all events in the Helsinki Biennial event calendar.

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All press releases and image bank: https://helsinkibiennaali.fi/en/for-media/ 

Information for visitors

Helsinki Biennial presents 41 artists or collectives from Finland and around the world. You can spot artworks on Vallisaari along a marked trail both outdoors and inside historical buildings, gunpowder cellars, and empty residential buildings. The trail is about three kilometres long.

Helsinki Biennial is free of charge. There is a fee for the ferry.

Opening hours:
12 June – 29 August, Mon–Sun 11 am – 6 pm
1 – 26 September, Wed–Sun 11 am – 6 pm

Helsinki Biennial’s web-based mobile guide is a handy information bank both for planning a visit and while visiting the island. In the mobile guide you will find a map of Vallisaari Island, information on the artists and artworks, as well as the island’s services. You can find the mobile guide at https://mobileguide.helsinkibiennaali.fi/.

The regular ferry service to Vallisaari is run by Suomen Saaristokuljetus. The departure point for the ferries is the Helsinki Biennial pavilion, located next to the Old Market Hall. On Vallisaari, the ferries arrive at Luotsipiha and depart from Torpedolahti. You can buy ferry tickets online, on the ferries, and as of 12 June, at the Helsinki Biennial pavilion.

JT-Line will operate an Island Hopping ferry route from Hakaniemi to Vasikkasaari, Vallisaari and Lonna via Kruunuvuorenranta from 12 June to 15 August 2021.

You can also visit the island on your own boat. The Torpedolahti guest harbour has 50 moorings available.

Visitors to the island will be served by the information desk located by the Luotsipiha entry pier, and the Helsinki Biennial shop in Torpedolahti. The info desk and shop will be open during Helsinki Biennial’s opening hours. There are also several cafés on the island.

More information: https://helsinkibiennaali.fi/en/for-visitors/ 

Helsinki Biennial

Helsinki Biennial is an international contemporary art event organised every other year. The first Helsinki Biennial will be held on Vallisaari Island in summer 2021. The biennial is a joint project for the City of Helsinki, and it is curated and produced by HAM Helsinki Art Museum. The biennial is a part of the Helsinki City Strategy 2017–2021, whose objectives include strengthening the city’s international appeal and making the most of its maritime characteristics. 

The main partners of Helsinki Biennial include Metsähallitus and the Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation. It is also supported by the Jenny and Antti Wihuri Foundation and Svenska Kulturfonden.

The main corporate partner of Helsinki Biennial is Clear Channel. Other partners include Artek, Facebook Open Arts and Helen.

Korkeasaari Zoo and the Helsinki Festival are Helsinki Biennial’s event partners.

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Contacts

Katja Viitalähde-Annala
publicist
puh. +358 50 395 6084
katja.viitalahde@hel.fi



Anna Vihanta
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Images

Alicja Kwade: Big Be-Hide 2019 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Alicja Kwade: Big Be-Hide 2019 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Samir Bhowmik: Lost Islands, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/ Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Samir Bhowmik: Lost Islands, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/ Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Tadashi Kawamata: Vallisaari Lighthouse, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Tadashi Kawamata: Vallisaari Lighthouse, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Katharina Grosse: Shutter Splinter, 2021. Commissioned by HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021 © Katharina Grosse and VG Bild-Kunst Bonn, 2021. Courtesy of KÖNIG Gallery. Photo: Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Katharina Grosse: Shutter Splinter, 2021. Commissioned by HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021 © Katharina Grosse and VG Bild-Kunst Bonn, 2021. Courtesy of KÖNIG Gallery. Photo: Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Tuomas A. Laitinen: ΨZone, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/ Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Tuomas A. Laitinen: ΨZone, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/ Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Dafna Maimon: Indigestibles, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Dafna Maimon: Indigestibles, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Jaakko Niemelä: Quay 6, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Jaakko Niemelä: Quay 6, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Birit & Katja Haarla, Outi Pieski: Guhte gullá / Here to hear, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Birit & Katja Haarla, Outi Pieski: Guhte gullá / Here to hear, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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Maaria Wirkkala: Not So Innocent, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
Maaria Wirkkala: Not So Innocent, 2021 ©Maija Toivanen/HAM/Helsinki Biennial 2021.
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