September 17, 2004
Using humour to ponder the future
Greenland artist creates
elaborate joke to explore nation's independence movement
JANE
GEORGE
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Inuk
Hoegh hopes his art will make Greenlanders laugh and question their future direction.
(PHOTOS BY JANE GEORGE)
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COPENHAGEN - Picture a
well-organized Greenlandic army, a tank-like attack-iceberg or a fleet of kayaks
capable of launching missles.
These are some of the elements
in a hilarious art exhibition, developed for the Home Rule government's 25th
anniversary, which looks at Greenland's evolution into the "United States
of Greenland."
Greenland prides itself
on being a country that's never been at war, unlike Denmark or most other nations,
but what would happen, this exhibition asks, if Greenland was independent and
an imperialistic force in the world?
Called "Melting Barriers,"
the exhibition's title refers to what's in store for Greenland when it becomes
an independent nation and no longer has Denmark as a barrier against the outside
world: what values will Greenlanders want to protect and how?
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The
ilu-attack vehicle, shown here on a map of Copenhagen, is a kind of Trojan Horse,
with invading forces hidden inside.
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"Greenland! We are
at war! At this moment the troops of Greenland are advancing...our troops are
liberating the world with the message of peace and Greenlandicness...today Greenland
has invaded the world to bring peace, prosperity and cold temperatures to everyone,"
says a mock speech read at the opening of "Melting Barriers" in June.
"Attack is the best
defence," says a pretend Greenlandic officer in a video about the Greenlandic
army.
An entire room, redesigned
as a bunker, is crammed with the fake paraphernalia of an independent and expansionist
Greenland.
Posters urge Greenlanders
to join their armed forces. There's a scale model of a giant iceberg or "ilu-attack"
vehicle conquering Copenhagen, and a map of Denmark that makes Denmark look
like Greenland with new Greenlandic place names.
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Greenlanders
should make love and war, suggests this "Love Box."
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Some materials also encourage
Greenlanders to make babies, so Greenland and its army will flourish. A "love
box", available from the state, contains ingredients lovers might want:
a candle, wine and chocolates.
All parts of the well-designed
exhibition look startlingly realistic.
When artists Inuk Silis
Hoegh and Asmund Havsteen-Mikkelsen went to Nuuk earlier this year to film videos
to use in the exhibition, they drove around Nuuk in jeeps and military gear
and set up a tent to hold a fake recruitment effort for new soldiers.
Some people took the entire
performance seriously, were impressed by the show of military bravado and force,
and were ready to sign up immediately.
That's because irony isn't
used much in Greenland.
"If you say something
you mean it," says Hoegh, 32, the son of famed Greenlandic artist Aka Hoegh
who is already well-known himself in Greenland as a filmmaker and artist.
Hoegh says the exhibition
is simply intended to open up dicussion on issues.
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This
poster urges Greenlanders to have lots of children for the state.
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"What will happen
when Greenland doesn't have Denmark as a pillow? What do we want?" Hoegh
says.
The exhibition wasn't meant
to be an anti-war statement.
"But we are asking,
when do we use force to enforce non-violence?"
The exhibition raised eyebrows
in Nuuk, where it was part of the 25th anniversary celebrations for the Home
Rule government, and then in Copenhagen where some Danish visitors didn't understand
its humour.
"Melting Barriers"
is set up at Copenhagen's new North Atlantic house, a recently-restored warehouse
from the 1700s.
Once the hub for trade
with for Denmark's colonies, the North Atlantic House now provides space to
government and tourism offices for Greenland, Iceland and the Faroe Islands,
and to the Indigenous Peoples Secretariat, which supplies support to the Arctic
Council's indigenous participants.
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The
North Atlantic House in Copenhagen, is a recently-restored warehouse from the
1700s, that now provides space to government and tourism offices for Greenland,
Iceland and the Faroe Islands as well as a cultural exhibits.
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"North Atlantic House
is a boost for cooperation between small, often-neglected nations of the far
north like Greenland, which is reduced in people's minds to being simply a place
where the scenery is exotic and the climate is wild and harsh," says Anna
Maria Bogadottir from the North Atlantic House.
Bogadottir says the North
Atlantic House is "an icebreaker," opening up new opportunities in
the old colonial capital.
After "Melting Barriers"
closes in October, the materials will be put away for a few months, although
the exhibition may eventually tour to other circumpolar venues.
Jane George was in Copenhagen,
Denmark and Nuuk, Greenland earlier this month as a guest of the Nordic Council,
a discussion forum for ministers from Finland, Sweden, Norway, Iceland and Denmark/Greenland,
and a participant in its annual seminar for journalists.
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