Your browser is not supported by khio.no. To view this site please upgrade or use another browser. If you can't use a modern browser, try disabling javascript, which will make khio.no simple, but mostly usable.

Supported browsers: Chrome 117, Firefox (Android) 118, Android WebView 117, Chrome 117, Chrome 116, Chrome 115, Chrome 114, Chrome 109, Edge 117, Edge 116, Firefox 118, Firefox 117, Firefox 91, Firefox 78, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 17.0, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 16.6, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 16.3, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 16.1, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 15.6-15.7, Opera Mobile 73, Opera 103, Opera 102, Opera 101, Safari (MacOS) 17.0, Safari (MacOS) 16.6, Safari (MacOS) 15.6, Samsung 22, Samsung 21

Javascript is disabled. khio.no should still be usable, but the user experience will be simpler.

Exhibition

Laboratorie RISS / HSS19--20--

Laboratorie RISS / HSS19--20--

A group of 10-year-olds, a runologist, three art students and an artist will study material textculture through exercises in technology and cognition.

In the last week of the semester, the Academy Room will be turned into the research laboratory RISS. Here, a group of 10-year-olds, a runologist, three art students and an artist will study material textculture through exercises in technology and cognition. The laboratory is led by Petrine Vinje, in an installation built for the tuition room – a social space that allows learning through speculation.

In the installation, Petrine Vinje shows the serial work HSS19--20--. This work has been developed before and during isolation, over the last two years. In the artwork, the artist`s interest in non-conscious cognition in both humans and technological artifacts come to the fore. In HSS19--20—she examines the plastic, material (physical, energetic, informative) through the haptic in order to come closer to, to touch and to be touched.

The public is invited to an open evening on Thursday 17 June at 18-21
(Or by appointment June 16-17th. Mail to Petrine Vinje.)

Artist Petrine Vinje is currently a research fellow at Oslo National Academy of the Arts, Department of Art and Craft.
Contributing runologist Karen Langsholt Holmqvist is a research fellow at NIKU, the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research and University of Oslo.

The project is supported by Arts Council Norway.

https://kunstnerneshus.no/akademirommet