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 130, Firefox (Android) 130, Android WebView 130, Chrome 130, Chrome 129, Chrome 128, Chrome 127, Chrome 109, Edge 130, Edge 129, Edge 128, Firefox 132, Firefox 131, Firefox 130, Firefox 91, Firefox 78, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 18.0, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 17.6-17.7, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 17.5, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 16.6-16.7, Safari/Chrome (iOS) 15.6-15.8, Opera Mobile 80, Opera 114, Opera 113, Safari (MacOS) 18.0, Safari (MacOS) 17.6, Samsung 26, Samsung 25

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

Talk

Design talks: D for Daughter

Design talks: D for Daughter

The artist Elina Birkehag will talk about her process researching and working with carvings as well as making it into a book.

D FOR DAUGHTER – researching a living archive

Deep in the woods in Dalarna, Sweden, scattered amongst stumps and newer growth trees, stand Scotch pine trees, hundreds of years old—thick, gnarled, and covered with carvings. The messages inscribed into their trunks were made by female shepherds who, between the seventeenth and the early twentieth century, left their villages to live and work together on the fäbod (summer farm), and lead their families’ cattle to graze. While out in the pastures, these young women carved dates, their initials, and notes to each other. The trunks became inscribed with a kind of frenetic teenage scrawl, a coded language, an assertion of their existence: HERE WE CARVE OUR NAMES.

The artist Elina Birkehag grew up in a village not far from these woods. She has searched and documented the carved messages on the trees—a “living” archive that will also die, decompose, and eventually disappear. Her book collects written notes, drawings, photographs, and other findings, which connect us with the female shepherds and allow us to read the trees.

The talk will be in English.

Elina Birkehag Bio

Elina Birkehag (*1989, Dalarna, lives and works in Stockholm, Sweden) is an artist working with writing and inscription in relation to the body, technology, and time. Her work is mediated through a variety of disciplines, including publications, photography, short films, wall drawings, and performances. Birkehag graduated with an MFA from the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm and previously holds a BA from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam. Elina is currently a fellow for the Bernadotte Scholarship at Konstakademien in Stockholm.

https://elinabirkehag.com/

.