Tunnel Vision
Exhibition in Tysta Marigången in Stockholm,
with twelve artists from the Royal Academy of Art
4 – 12 December 2021
Curators
Joel Albinsson, Hanna Bargheer,
Yul Cho, Jeanette Gunnarsson,
Victoria McCarthy, Katinka Saarnak,
Ifra Shariq, Johanna Rüskamp,
Laus Østergaard
Participating artists
Theres K Agdler, Akay & Olabo,
Christine Dahl Helweg-Larsen,
Astrid Eriksson, Sara Ekholm Eriksson,
Charlotte Landelius, Linnea Lindberg, Mehregan Meysami, tm,
Lior Nønne Malue Hansen,
Photos
Jean Baptiste Béranger
Graphic design
Mikaela Cederholm,
Emilia Velazquez Mospinek
Project site
tunnelvision2021
with twelve artists from the Royal Academy of Art
4 – 12 December 2021
Curators
Joel Albinsson, Hanna Bargheer,
Yul Cho, Jeanette Gunnarsson,
Victoria McCarthy, Katinka Saarnak,
Ifra Shariq, Johanna Rüskamp,
Laus Østergaard
Participating artists
Theres K Agdler, Akay & Olabo,
Christine Dahl Helweg-Larsen,
Astrid Eriksson, Sara Ekholm Eriksson,
Charlotte Landelius, Linnea Lindberg, Mehregan Meysami, tm,
Lior Nønne Malue Hansen,
Manos Saklas, Aske Thiberg
Photos
Jean Baptiste Béranger
Graphic design
Mikaela Cederholm,
Emilia Velazquez Mospinek
Project site
tunnelvision2021
tunnel vision // tunnel:vision // tunnelvision // ˈtʌn(ə)l vision
Tysta Marigången is a sensory threshold, a liminal passage between states of mind; a place and a non-place. It is a walk-through passage located in the center of Stockholm, and yet barely used and unknown to most. What is this tunnel’s purpose? Has it been here all this time? Will it still be here in the future? Where will I end up if I enter? Through passages, cities create ways of going out and coming back in. ‘Tunnel Vision’ serves as a portal into a different way of understanding public space and our role in it, a different state of Stockholm. Here, the hidden struggles, the bubbling tensions of the city are brought to the surface. The tunnel is both cold and quiet, but it can also be loud with hopes, disappointments, and the echoes of passing cyclists.
For the Nobel Week Lights, we invite visitors to Tysta Marigången - to witness the contradictions, ask questions and experience the multiplicity of this space. Through multimedia works, light sculptures, performances, sound installations, ‘Tunnel Vision’ invites you to explore artworks inspired by the Anthropocene, friendship, loneliness, borders, and the power of poetry.
Tysta Marigången is a passageway located in the center of Stockholm, near T-Centralen. Spanning the distance between Tegelbacken and S:ta Clara.
Tysta Marigången is a sensory threshold, a liminal passage between states of mind; a place and a non-place. It is a walk-through passage located in the center of Stockholm, and yet barely used and unknown to most. What is this tunnel’s purpose? Has it been here all this time? Will it still be here in the future? Where will I end up if I enter? Through passages, cities create ways of going out and coming back in. ‘Tunnel Vision’ serves as a portal into a different way of understanding public space and our role in it, a different state of Stockholm. Here, the hidden struggles, the bubbling tensions of the city are brought to the surface. The tunnel is both cold and quiet, but it can also be loud with hopes, disappointments, and the echoes of passing cyclists.
For the Nobel Week Lights, we invite visitors to Tysta Marigången - to witness the contradictions, ask questions and experience the multiplicity of this space. Through multimedia works, light sculptures, performances, sound installations, ‘Tunnel Vision’ invites you to explore artworks inspired by the Anthropocene, friendship, loneliness, borders, and the power of poetry.
Tysta Marigången is a passageway located in the center of Stockholm, near T-Centralen. Spanning the distance between Tegelbacken and S:ta Clara.