28
Apr
29
Apr
Power Relations and Historical Turning Points in the Baltic Sea Region
Symposium Power Relations and Historical Turning Points in the Baltic Sea Region: Critical Vocabularies for Understanding Art, Material Culture and Environment
This symposium aims to revisit the vocabularies for art and craft based material culture, environment, their relationships and hierarchies in the Baltic Sea region, by bringing together scholars in humanities, social sciences, and heritage practitioners. We will look at a longer time span in order to contribute critical articulations for the study of the region, and to bring attention to the hierarchies of power and influence in the region. Even though in recent years, research on shared histories and egalitarian approaches have started to grow taking interest in cultural exchanges, we want to put the spotlight on the inequalities across the region on the national, transnational and regional levels, to examine residues of old power structures, such as Swedish conquests in its age of ‘greatness’ in the 17th and early 18th centuries, the Russian dominance in the region in the 19th century, the experiences of the world wars and the Cold War in the 20th century.
The symposium aims to examine how the relationships between forms of overseas colonial power and domination have affected the dynamics around the Baltic Sea, and the relative positions of various ethnic groups, including minorities and indigenous peoples, as well as the influence of such forms of administration and control on approaching the environment. What kind of language do we need to articulate and speak about such forms of influence and geographical interrelations? What could we gain from dialogues between different disciplines and perspectives of heritage practitioners? How does the natural environment and the ways of interacting with it affect understanding material culture and vice versa? What kinds of roles have art and visual culture carried in maintaining and resisting the hierarchies?
Register: camilla.larsson@sh.se
PROGRAM
DAY 1 • 28.04.2025 • MONDAY
Location: Södertörn University, Alfred Nobels allé 7 Flemingsberg, room MC213.
9:00–9:30 Welcome and introduction
Session 1: Exhibitions as means of contact and friction
9:30–11:00 Moderator: TBA
Kristian Handberg & Joel Odebrant: Exhibiting “the Baltic” during the Long 1989
Kristoffer Arvidsson: Exchange: Difference and Mirroring: Exhibitions of Art from the Baltic Region at the Gothenburg Museum of Art in the Post-War Period
Linara Dovydaitytė: Dissonant heritage in Baltic museums: beyond representations
11:00–11:30 Coffee break
Session 2: The marginalised and the silenced in the post-Cold War contexts
11:30–13:00 Moderator: TBA
Agne Bagdziunaite: Imaginary Archive – Power, Memory, and Gendered Histories in the Baltic Sea Region
Indrė Urbelytė: Building Socialist Realism. Works of Soviet Artists in the State Art Collections of Occupied Lithuania
Nicola Foster: Art and the Politics of Independence: Beware of Exiting Your Dreams (2001)
13:00–14:00 Lunch Break
Session 3: Exhibitions and urban preservation as mediators of dissonant heritage
14:00–15:30 Moderator: Jörg Hackmann
Irina Seits: To heal or to hide? Reuses of histories and material legacy of inconvenient pasts: the case of the Noblessner district in Tallinn
Feliks Gornischeff: Exhibiting early 19th century ethnographic objects from the Pacific: the example of Estonian Maritime Museum’s exhibition ’Famous Sea Voyages: The Broadening Horizons of Europeans’
Mia Åkefeldt: Negotiating Finnishness through prefabricated houses. Trade and exhibitions of Finnish prefabricated wooden houses in the Baltic Sea region between 1880 and 1960
DAY 2 • 29.04.2025 • TUESDAY
Location: Södertörn University, Alfred Nobels allé 7 Flemingsberg, room MC213.
Session 4: Making archives speak, challenging hegemonic narratives
10:00–11:30 Moderator: TBA
Karin Keisu & Josse Thuresson: Colonialism, assimilation and the construction of the nationstate to Swedish minority groups/minority languages
Agnieška Avin Ileri: The (Dis)Power of Absence: Roma Marginalization in Lithuanian State Archives and Memory Institutions
Quinsy Gario: Communicating Black Pasts, Presents and Futures
11:30–12:00 Coffee break
Session 5: Past and current narratives on nature and organic matter in de-colonial practices
12:00-13:30 Moderator TBA
Margaret Tali: The Baltic Oak as a Symbol and the Material Histories of Baltic Colonialism
Martyna Šulskutė: Wetland restoration in Lithuania as post-colonial practice
Mairita Folkmane, Aiga Dzalbe & Ilva Skulte: Soil, clay and discourse: how the place of ceramics is re-interpreted in Rothko Museum in Latgale
13:30–14:30 Lunch Break
Session 6: Art and exhibitions crafting vocabularies for the environment and socio-political memory
12:00-13:30 Moderator TBA
Ieva Astahovska: The Baltic Sea and the Concept of the Politics of Location in Contemporary Art
Camilla Larsson: Building Bridges, Sowing Seeds in the Baltic Sea Region in Times of Transformation. The Organic Art of Władysław Hasior and Magdalena Abakanowicz in Sweden during the 1970s
Astrid von Rosen: Sea of Memories: Scenographic Vocabularies for Baltic Sea Heritage
13:30–14:00 Coffee break
14:00-14:30 Final discussion and conclusions
Arranged by
Research network "Connecting Histories. Understanding the Baltic Sea Region through Art and Material Culture"
Contact
Page updated
14-04-2025