Etelänloma / Down South

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A week ago, I took the train to Helsinki, where I attended the Media Education Seminar by Finnish Society on Media Education held in Kiasma. I was eager to go, due to my general interest on the subject, but also because my thesis is related to the topic and I am in need of contacts and possible collaborators (which I found plenty there!). My thesis is an ambitious project, but I perceive the media education as the most important part of school teaching across all subjects, and therefore am willing to go to great lengths getting it viral.

Some of you might think now: why media education? We face a chaotic stream of photos every single moment of our lives, but do we have any tools to interpret them? I perceive that a majority of us take visual culture for granted and pay no attention to the way images reform our reality and how we become a continuation of those views, ideologies etc. Many of us are aware of the advertisement photos, atleast some of the time, but advertisement is a very small percentage of the visual data, we gaze upon every day. For example, newspaper footage is often perceived as a representation of some universal truth, or at least as unbiased and objective documentation, which is a load of bull. I think that there is not a single visual entity (photo, video, art, etc.) that would not in some way serve its maker’s ideologies (do not take this use of the word ideologies in a narrow-minded way – I use it here to indicate an intent, a purpose, some underlying system of thinking). Of course, I do not perceive the viewer as passive but instead as an active participator, who enters into a dialogue with the visual image and produces meanings and is in constant process of (re-)forming his/hers reality – and it is just beacuse of this that I think media education to be so vital to all of us, because the active viewer constructing his/her multiple identities needs a set of tools to be able to interpret the ways images are making us want to buy/fear/consume/become/love/adore/hate/eat/kiss/be many diferent things.

Well, back to my photos, so I arrived again to a very unwinterish landscape and enjoyed myself like a tourist traipsing around in my spring shoes. The sun set later than up North (maybe half an hour later, but for me it made really a difference now that the sun light has become scarce) and made a really idyllic scenery with the sun going down in the far end of the river. And when I walked home, I noticed that the janitor had put the christmas lights and decorations on the building facade and they looked so beautiful and nicely enhanced the already beautiful appearance of our house (our building is from the 20’s, when architects designed houses, and not engineers from construction companies: NCC, Hartela, etc.).

The last photo in the first collage is of my esposo-Gon, waiting me to finish my outfit, so we could get going to the baptism of my little sister’s son. I am not going to tell yet any more details, I am saving them for a future post – good shit coming!  I will just give you this: oh my, it was the first time that I went inside the Naantali church and it was really worthwhile going. Just amazing (I am a sucker for church architecture and especially medieval stuff)! I think Saint-Bridget/Birgitta also adds a lot to my affection towards the church – when working in Aboa Vetus & Ars Nova museum, I really got fed up with the patriarchaic medieval society and therefore welcome all the stories of the female power figure – Saint-Bridget/Birgitta.

And yes, I am planning on borrowing Gon’s new scarf that he bought in Selected Homme. Like for an eternity.         

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On Thursday, I had a bit of a meltdown, due to the anxiety I get when having to balance working on my university stuff (thesis, essays, raports – did I tell you that I am doing double amount of credit points this semester?) and meeting all my dearest during a couple of day’s stay in the South. Well, I met Eliisa on Thursday after realizing that I just need to see my friends, no matter what the thesis and other files scream from the desktop of my laptop. We decided to have wine instead of coffee, and we had a great time and it was just the thing that I needed. I took the photos of beautiful Eliisa sipping her red wine and she returned the favor taking some outfit photos of me. The awesome Third Eye coin purse is from this great designer that I came by with in September, on one of my aimless wanderings online, and immediately knew that I was in a need of some extra eyesight. 

And The last photocollage is because we have this tradition with my esposo that before every Christmas, both of us get to choose two (or sometimes more) X-mas tree decorations from Stockmann’s selection – the more corny and extravagant, the better. This year Gon chose the owl, seen in the first photo and I went with a piece of cake inside a glass container. How do you like ’em? 

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Music: A$AP Rocky – Wild For The Night

Santogold – My Superman

Agnes Obel – Falling, Catching

Nina Kinert – I Shot My Man

Muoti Ystävät ja perhe Päivän tyyli

Sunnuntai Narniassa / Oxymoron Within a Disney-landcsape

 

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I have never been a winter person but now, I think I am becoming one. Weather-wise in November, Turku is black, dreary and rainy but in Rovaniemi, it is white, frosty and almost artificial in its beauty – really a Narnia. These photos I took yesterday when I bicycled to Prisma (-17 degrees below zero), where I go every once in awhile just to get some activity (how sad, I know). I started bicycling after two o’clock when the bright, lemon-yellow sun was starting to set. The blue hue that takes place at that hour is easily filled by one’s own narratives and stories when moving through the landscape. After shopping, approximately one hour later, bicycling home, the darkness had already become more intense and the whole landscape changed in its mood. Trees, artificial electric lights, snow and frost turned into something utterly different than one hour earlier – I can only come up with an oxymoron to describe my thoughts when bicycling, because it felt like a fictional surrounding in its all-senses invading nature. Too much to be real.

I find immensely intriguing  the patterns, figures and abstract forms that emerge from the dark and frosty landscape, when the tree branches are covered in white frost, yet the dark outline of the tree branch itself is also visible, creating a disturbing visual hoax, as if the image has been double exposed. In addition to this visual double exposure, the temperature (-15 or so) causes all the tiny shards of snow to become like glimmering crystals that reflect light from different angles, even the air itself sparkles with these snow flake diamonds when walking.  

 

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I have kept on working with my wood block carving project, and the result is good: three wood blocks already carved, and three cuts in various parts of my left hand. The workspace is spacious and the short-lasting daytime light comes in through multiple big windows and creates a pool of light, where I tend to indulge myself in meanwhile working. Up north, the short hours of sunshine have to be taken as antidote against the rest of the 18 hours of darkness a day.  

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My lovely friend, Iiris Perkkiö took this photo (above) of me carving my wood block.

After arriving home from my bicycle tour, I went through my shoppings, to get an idea of my dinner. The ingredients were a random mix of stuff that at first, did not seem to come together at all: a half of a butternut squash, fresh parsley, chickpeas, oat milk (that I am totally hooked on), nuts and raisins. Most of the times when I go shopping, I just tend to improvise instead of having a well planned list of ingredients – it’s more fun that way! So instead of doing pumpkin soup with my beautiful orange butternut squash, I decided to turn it into patties fried on a pan.

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Orange patties:

half a butternut squash

400 g cooked chickpeas

one garlic 

tandooripaste (approx. 1 teaspoon)

corianderpaste (half a teaspoon)

fresh parsley

chickpea flour

 

I cut the pumpkin into pieces and boiled them in a small amount of water until mushy. Then I crushed them and the chickpeas, parsley, garlic and the tandoori & coriander pastes with a blender into a smooth, runny mixture. I added chickpea flour until the dough became manageable and easier to handle. Then I heated the pan, poured semi-generous amount of olive oil (how vague is that) and sprinkled some finger salt to the pan, patted the dough into nice pebbles with the help of flour, and fried them on the pan. Super yummy and the patties turned out having the vibrant orange color from the butternut squash – so visually pleasing as well.

 

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So some music to go with my Sunday – and your Monday:

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Fifteen Feet of Pure White Snow

Villa Nah – Ways To Be

The Irrepressibles – My Friend Jo

Koti Ruoka ja juoma Matkat