This year's festival exhibition is based on the story of the Lofoten Line: a major national initiative from 1861 intended to make fishing in Lofoten more efficient.
In this exhibition, you can experience the drawings, performances, videos, and sound works of 6 different artists exploring what the Lofoten Line might look like today, and challenging the way we communicate.
The exhibition takes its starting point from the story of the Lofoten Line. With its 170 km of sea cables and landlines, the system constituted the country's first telegraph line outside the main telephone network.
During the long cold winter months when the Lofotfishing took place, a temporary connection was established between 9 fish telegraph stations. Messages communicated about the movements of the cod but could also warn of upcoming storms and bad weather - a network of spark stations, by land and by sea.
The world's strongest ocean current prevented the cables from reaching the outermost islands in Lofoten: Værøy and Røst. Perhaps it was precisely the inaccessible aspect that made it particularly interesting - and not least highly necessary - to find new ways to communicate. After a series of trials and experiments, wireless messages were sent between Røst and Sørvågen in 1903.
The story tells of a man who rowed all the way from Røst to Sørvågen, a distance of 60 kilometers over the treacherous waters, to bring the news that the signal from Sørvågen had passed over the Lofoten mountains, crossed the maelstrom, and been picked up in Røst by the over 50 meters high wooden mast. Three years later, Northern Europe's first wireless spark transmitter station opened between Sørvågen and Røst, and Norway thus became number two in the world - only beaten by the Italians who managed to establish a similar connection the year before.
This year's festival exhibition is a collaboration with the North Norwegian Art Center and is a prelude to the Lofoten International Art Festival scheduled for September.
Exhibition period: June 22-29, 2024
Opening hours:
- June 22: 14:00 - 18:00
- June 23 - 29: 12:00 - 18:00