Sulje

Sulje

A travel report from the Arts and Culture Magazine Publishers Forum’s network activities in Helsinki and Tallinn. The Forum is a network connecting contemporary art and culture magazine publishers in the Baltic and Nordic countries: A Shade Colder (Estonia), Artnews.lt and Echo Gone Wrong (Lithuania), EDIT (Finland), Kunstkritikk (the Nordics), Art in Iceland (Iceland) and WunderKombinats (Latvia).

A travel report from the Arts and Culture Magazine Publishers Forum’s network activities in Helsinki and Tallinn. The Forum is a network connecting contemporary art and culture magazine publishers in the Baltic and Nordic countries: A Shade Colder (Estonia), Artnews.lt and Echo Gone Wrong (Lithuania), EDIT (Finland), Kunstkritikk (the Nordics), Art in Iceland (Iceland) and WunderKombinats (Latvia).

A travel report from the Arts and Culture Magazine Publishers Forum’s network activities in Helsinki and Tallinn. The Forum is a network connecting contemporary art and culture magazine publishers in the Baltic and Nordic countries: A Shade Colder (Estonia), Artnews.lt and Echo Gone Wrong (Lithuania), EDIT (Finland), Kunstkritikk (the Nordics), Art in Iceland (Iceland) and WunderKombinats (Latvia).

A travel report from the Arts and Culture Magazine Publishers Forum’s network activities in Helsinki and Tallinn. The Forum is a network connecting contemporary art and culture magazine publishers in the Baltic and Nordic countries: A Shade Colder (Estonia), Artnews.lt and Echo Gone Wrong (Lithuania), EDIT (Finland), Kunstkritikk (the Nordics), Art in Iceland (Iceland) and WunderKombinats (Latvia).

A Nordic-Baltic Editing Trip Across the Gulf of Finland

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

As the coronavirus crisis deepens and people are locked into their homes – apartments, houses, cities, villages, countries – the perspective gradually changes. The exhibitions in Tallinn at the moment take into consideration the space, both private and public, starting from very intimate surroundings and broadening to public discussions on why authorities must take responsibility for the city space, writes Kaarin Kivirähk from Estonian Centre for Contemporary Art.

A letter from Tallinn, the city from another dimension