IHME Contemporary Art Festival

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival (also written as "IHME") is a yearly festival for contemporary art produced by Pro Arte Foundation Finland. The festival includes a public work of art, a varied programme of events around the artwork, and educational art projects. Ihme Project, commissioned by the Festival, is to be realised in the public realm. A varied Festival programme ranging from artist talks to film screenings opens up the Ihme Project for discussion and debate and is free to attend. Ihme also offers an art education programme, Ihme School, with various activities. The word "ihme" means a wonder or a miracle in Finnish.

Pro Arte Art Foundation Finland seeks to promote art as a resource for democratic society, and as an important part of human life and everyday existence. The Foundation's aim is to enhance the status and visibility of visual art, to improve the relationship between visual art and the public, and to make it more accessible. The Foundation's work is international in scope and directed at anyone interested in culture. The expert team of Ihme invites the artist to conceive the project, and also plans the programme of the festival. The expert team of the foundation is: fi:Tuula Arkio (chair), fi:Leevi Haapala, Hanna Johansson, Paula Toppila, and Timo Valjakka.[1]

Ihme Project

Each year, Pro Arte Foundation Finland invites an internationally recognized visual artist or group of artists to make a temporary work of art in public space. The way the IHME Project is to be carried out, along with its form and location, are jointly determined by the Foundation and the selected artist.[2]

Ihme Festival

A varied Festival programme aims to increase interest in the visual arts and to deepen the public's relationship to it. The programme ranges from talks related to the Ihme Project and other topical issues to film screenings and other types of public programming including music and workshops, varying from year to year. Speakers contributing to the programme of talks include artists, also including the Festival artist, as well as academics and professionals from different fields.[3] Admission to all events is free.[4]

Ihme Publications

IHME publications document the events of the annual festival as a digital online publication.[5]

Ihme School

IHME School consists of educational art projects and workshops. The Festival collaborates with schools and universities, as well as The City of Helsinki Youth Division, and produces programmes for different target groups to make contemporary art more accessible.[6]

History

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2018

The IHME Project 2018, film entitled THE BEETLE, was conceived by the Swedish artist Henrik Håkansson. The False Click Beetle (Hylochares cruentatus) is an endangered insect that lives on the old Mätäoja riverbed in Vantaa, Finland. Håkansson's movie was screened on both days of the festival that took place on May 25–26 May 2018 in Korjaamo Culture Factory, Helsinki.

The tenth IHME Festival included also other films and video art, talks and music. The festival featured a sound art project The Band of Weeds and singer-songwriter Sofia Jannok. The questions of art and ecology were discussed, among others, by director, playwright and writer Juha Hurme, Professor Jyrki Muona and Academy Research Fellow Marjo Saastamoinen. The programme included also other discussions on the IHME Project and on creating and curating art to the public space.

IHME Festival arranged programme also in endangered beetle's habitat in Myyrmäki, Vantaa between June 1–10, 2018. This part of the programme included screenings of Håkansson's film, workshops and guided tours. IHME audience workers also cycled around the area and gave information about the IHME Project, the beetle and the nature of the area.

The 2018 IHME Project THE BEETLE will be viewable internationally at Yle Areena, Finland's national streaming service, until May 2019.

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2017

The IHME Project artist 2017 Theaster Gates brought to Helsinki his experimental musical ensemble, The Black Monks of Mississippi.[7] The group, founded and led by Gates, offered to Helsinki audience a journey of exploration into the power of the voice and into the potential of improvisation. Gates's body of works titled The Black Charismatic took place 5–29 April 2017 and consisted of: a film shown at the Finnkino Tennispalatsi cinema; a live concert at the Rock Church; a video installation shown in the Finnish Salvation Army Temple; and the release of a three-LP recording.

The new venue for the programme of talks and films was the Gloria Cultural Arena. The two-day event tackled themes emerging from Gates's practice: the meaning of art and cultural appropriation. Under discussion were also themes raised by Hannah Arendt’s thinking. Two series of films screened at the Festival mirrored Gates’s production.

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2016

The main stage for the IHME Project 2016 was a Helsinki icon: the tram. The work was commissioned from the Czech artist Kateřina Šedá, who invited street musicians to perform on all Helsinki tram routes on March 16–19.[8] During its four days, the Tram Buskers’ Tour provided more than 300 hours of live music and reached a total of nearly 24,000 tram passengers.[9]

The Tour featured artists from both Finland and abroad, including: Antti Tolvi; Bence Boka; Chano; DVA; EntreCuerdas; The Entropies; Hermanni Turkki; Hester & Holly Rose; Kaikuluotain; Kiiora; Mario Parizek; PAM; Sagolik; SAffrAn; The Space Lady; Stephen Paul Taylor; Steve Aruni and Funky Monkeys; Sybren Renema; TBeeGirls; and Whale On.

The main Festival Partners were Helsinki City Transport and Helsinki Region Transport.

There were more than 1100 visitors to the IHME Days over the weekend of April 1–3. The themes of the programme of talks were: communities and art; connections between art and education, especially phenomenon-centred learning; and the question of what artists do when they create art.[10] Marie-Louise Ekman’s art exhibition was new to the programme: a series of the artist’s prints produced by Tensta Konsthall in Stockholm was on view throughout the weekend.

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2015

The British artist Jeremy Deller designed the Ihme Project 2015 entitled Do Touch. In this new work, the public had a chance to inspect objects from the collections of Helsinki’s historical museums for a week in March 2015. The artist selected the objects together with the staff of the collaborating museums. The staff members were trained to give further information on the objects and the time period they were used.[11] The project was realised in partnership with the following museums in Helsinki: Customs Museum, Design Museum, Finnish Museum of Natural History, Helsinki City Museum, Military Museum, Museum of Technology and National Museum of Finland.[12][13]

Ihme Festival’s talks programme dealt with the themes of the current Ihme Project. At the core of this year’s public commission by Jeremy Deller were the following: the past in the present; the object as a mediator of information and experience; and the artist as curator. The last theme was aimed at contemporary-art professionals. Ihme also discussed other topical subjects: the fragmentation of the media in the Internet age, and the multi-dimensional way in which the art of curating manifests itself in the field of visual art.[14]

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2014

The Ihme Project 2014 was created by the Israeli artist Yael Bartana. The project under the title True Finn – Tosi suomalainen was a communal experiment. Participants living in Finland and coming from different ethnic, religious and political backgrounds took part. Participants went through tasks that deal with cultural differences but also similarities.[15] The project was compiled as a video art work. The film’s premiere was on March 31, 2014 at the Bio Rex cinema in Helsinki.[16][17][18]

The Ihme Days 2014 took place at the Old Student House in Helsinki April 4–6, 2014. Festival’s discussions, films, club and workshops centred on themes of national identity and multiculturalism.[19]

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2013

The Ihme Project artist 2013 was the Polish artist Miroslaw Balka Miroslaw Balka with Signals. It was an art project carried out together with Helsinki residents during four days, 4–7 April 2013. Miroslaw Balka wanted to give the time and space in his artwork to the residents of Helsinki, and to their most important questions. Each event started with the questions signaled in the urban space using semaphore-flag signals, after which an open discussion of the topics began. Residents, politicians and experts participated equally in the discussions.[20][21]

Ihme Days 2013 took place 11–14 April 2013 at the Old Student House in Helsinki. The theme of the Days was the art's potential to function as catalyst for change.[22]

Ihme Publication 2013 was a part of Miroslaw Balka's artwork, consisting of two advertisements in the Metro newspaper on 27 September 2012 and 21 March 2013.

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2012

In the year 2012 The Heart Archive by the French artist Christian Boltanski expanded the scope of the IHME Contemporary Art Festival to four Finnish cities. The project was staged simultaneously in Helsinki, Joensuu, Rovaniemi, and Vaasa during 12 March - 1 April 2012. Each installation of The Heart Archive takes the form of a space where recordings are made of human heartbeats.[23][24][25] The heartbeats have been collected since 2008 from all over the world to an archive on Teshima island in Japan.[26]

Themes for the IHME Days 2012 were collecting and the archive. The Days took place at the Old Student House in Helsinki 23–25 March 2012.[27]

Christian Boltanski's IHME Edition was published in newspapers as a series of advertisements published in the four newspapers: Pohjalainen (Vaasa), Karjalainen (Joensuu), Lapin Kansa (Rovaniemi) and NYT (the weekly supplement of Helsingin Sanomat, Helsinki).[28]

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2011

The Danish artists' group Superflex installation created for the Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2011 was a film and sculpture titled Modern Times Forever in front of the Stora Enso Building in Helsinki 23 March - 2 April 2011. The film was shown in Helsinki Market Square on a 40m² LED screen, so that one could see the original building simultaneously with the building in the film. The film lasted over ten days and could be watched 24 hours a day.[29][30] The movie is one of the longest films in the world.[31]

The Ihme Days 2011 were held at the Old Student House in Helsinki 1–3 April 2011. The themes of the festival derived from the IHME Project 2011 and were the time, the city and the future.[32]

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2010

The Ihme Project 2010 was the sound installation When Day Closes designed by the Scottish artist Susan Philipsz for the Helsinki Central Railway Station. The artwork was presented 12 March - 11 April 2011. In the work the artist performs unaccompanied The Song of My Heart (Sydämeni laulu) composed by Jean Sibelius to a poem by Aleksis Kivi.[33][34]

The Ihme Days 2011 were held 26–28 March 2010 at the Old Student House in Helsinki. The themes were sound as art work and art in public space.[35]

Ihme Edition 2010 was Free Shop by Superflex. The artwork takes place in an ordinary shop. Anything purchased in the shop by any given customer is free of charge. Free Shop was realized during September 2010 - March 2011.[36]

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2009

British sculptor Antony Gormley was the artist to conceive the first Ihme Project in 2009. Gormley created a work called Clay and the Collective Body in the Kaisaniemi sports field in Helsinki, bringing together clay and Helsinki locals in a specially erected pneumatic building. The artwork was realized in two phases. In the first phase 22–24 March 2009 the public was allowed to view the constructed clay cube. In the second phase 25 March - 3 April 2009, the public had an opportunity to work on and with the clay and to use it to make objects of any kind. The work took place in four-hour sessions, with about 2,000 participants.[37][38][39]

The first Ihme Days were held at the Old Student House in Helsinki 3–5 April 2009. The themes of the days were who makes art and who is art made for.[40]

The second Ihme Edition was a video work After Closedown by the artist Susan Philipsz that had its premiere at YLE Teema TV Channel on September 24, 2009. In the video, the artist sings the themes of two movies, The Wicker Man and Rosemary's Baby. The video work was shown for two weeks as the last programme of the evening.[41]

Ihme Contemporary Art Festival 2008

The first Ihme Edition was a full-page newspaper announcement devised by Antony Gormley. The Edition appeared in the newspapers Helsingin Sanomat and Metro on Friday 28 March 2008 and in Hufvudstadsbladet on 29 March 2008. The idea of the announcement was to tell people about the existence of the Pro Arte Foundation Finland and its work, and also to invite readers to take part in Gormley's project in Helsinki in 2009.[42]

Ihme 0

The first Ihme production was Ihme 0; films and videos by international contemporary artists. The film programme was screened in Bio Rex cinema in Helsinki on 29 March 2008.[43]

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References

  1. "About us" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  2. "IHME Project" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  3. "IHME Contemporary Art Festival" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  4. "IHME Contemporary Art Festival" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  5. "IHME Publications" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  6. "IHME School" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  7. Robertson, Laura (24 April 2017). "The Black Charismatic". Frieze.com. Retrieved 10 August 2017.
  8. Embuscado, Rain (10 March 2016). "Artist Kateřina Šedá Is Creating Live Performances During Your Commute". artnet News. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  9. "IHME Project 2016". Pro Arte Foundation Finland. 26 April 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  10. "Talks programme - IHME Contemporary Art Festival". Pro Arte Foundation Finland. 2 February 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  11. "Baltic Diary: April". Apollo Magazine. 13 April 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  12. Talvio, Otto (8 October 2014). "Suomessa vieraileva brittitaiteilija haluaa antaa museoesineet hypisteltäväksi" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  13. Frilander, Aino (16 March 2015). "Museoesineet tuotiin helsinkiläisten kosketeltaviksi" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  14. "Talks programme -IHME Contemporary Art Festival". Pro Arte Foundation Finland. 2 February 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
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  16. Viljanen, Kaisa (3 October 2013). "Seuraava Ihme-teos käsittelee suomalaisuutta" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  17. Viljanen, Kaisa (2 February 2014). "Israelilaisen Yael Bartanan elokuva määrittelee suomalaisuuden uusiksi" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  18. Björk, Helena. "Å forestille seg noe annet". KunstForum (2/2014): 14–19.
  19. "IHME Contemporary Art Festival Programme Announced". Pro Arte Foundation Finland. 5 February 2014. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  20. Björk, Helena (23 April 2013). "Silent messages across the city". Kunstforum. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
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  22. "Ihme-päivillä puidaan taiteen poliittisuutta" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. 12 April 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
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  28. "IHME 2012" (in English and Finnish). Retrieved 2013-11-15.
  29. Bomsdorf, Clemens (28 March 2011). "Superflex envisions the decay of capitalism". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  30. "Time is an illusion..." World Architecture News. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
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  32. "Ihmeellistä menoa taas Helsingissä" (in Finnish). Turun Sanomat. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  33. Seikkula, Aura (1 April 2010). "Susan Philipsz: Helsinki Central Railway Station, Helsinki, Finland". Frieze Magazine. Retrieved 18 June 2013.
  34. Uimonen, Anu (2 April 2009). "Äänitaiteilija Susan Philipsz on ensi vuoden Ihme-taiteilija" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  35. Jäämeri, Hannele (26 March 2009). "Äänestä taidetta IHME-päivillä: Mitä kuuluu, kun ei kuulu mitään?" (in Finnish). Suomen Kuvalehti. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  36. Koppinen, Mari (27 November 2011). ""Huh? Did you say FREE?" Free Shop springs surprises for consumers in Helsinki". Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  37. Ryynänen, Max. "Antony Gormley: Clay and the Collective Body". Flash Art. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  38. Uimonen, Anu (26 March 2009). "Jokainen osaa muovata maailman" (in Finnish). Helsingin Sanomat. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  39. Wasastjerna, Camilla (27 March 2009). "Leran omvandlas på nytt i Kajsaniemi" (in Swedish). Hufvudstadsbladet. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  40. Jäämeri, Hannele (3 April 2009). "Nyt ihmetellään mitä se taide oikein on" (in Finnish). Suomen Kuvalehti. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
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