Exhibition: 10 September - 23 October 2021
Venue: Persons Projects | Helsinki School, Lindenstr. 34, 10969 Berlin
Opening: 17 September 2021
Persons Projects | Helsinki School is thrilled to present Jaakko Kahilaniemi's first solo exhibition Mining Your Business. The exhibition presents photographic works from Kahilaniemi‘s series Nature Like Capital (ongoing series since 2018), in which he explores the complex and contradictory relationship today’s exploitative society has with nature and the difficulties in finding a mutual path for a future. In his works he questions the role of the individual in the environmental degradation caused by global climate change.
Jaakko Kahilaniemi works as a visual artist and photographer in Finland
and is part of the Helsinki School movement. He is drawn to places of
radical interference between humans and natural forces, whether it be
environmental pollutions or the aftermath of a forest fire. Kahilaniemi
captures his surroundings with the directness of black-and-white
photography, letting the image speak for itself, yet always includes a playful and poetic visual twist. His visual language unveils its secrets
by challenging the viewers to step outside their preconceived comfort
zones and look at the broader context of where we fit into the nature of
all things.
Central and eponymous in this exhibition is the
triptych Mining Your Business. The photographs show three mining
factories in Finland, owned by the severely criticized gold producer
Dragon Mining. Mining Your Business #1 depicts the Kutemajärvi goldmine
in Orivesi, which was closed in 2019, leaving the nearby waters and
lakes polluted. Mining Your Business #2 is taken in Sastamala and
depicts a former nickel and copper mine, which was closed in 1995.
However, the concentrators are used until today to process ore from the
nearby mines. The Jokisivu goldmine in Huittinen, captured in Mining
Your Business #3, is nowadays in use for gold mining even though it has
ruining effects on close by lakes. Through repetitive photographing
Kahilaniemi created a collage, in which gold dust seems like a burn
mark, setting the surrounding landscape on fire. Shiny chunks of gold
turn out to be gilded ash, which trickles like polluted rain on the
remaining forests and lakes.
Kahilaniemi often works with dots,
painted on the inside of the framed glass, to playfully break up the
images of natural disaster. However, behind this visual detail there
also lies a decisive commentary about every human’s impact on the
ecosystem – the "unknown factor” as the artists names it. Going Crazy,
Flow over Flow, and Foreign Factor reveal the destruction of natural
forests due to storms, floods, and fires in Finland caused by climate
change. A viewer standing in front of these works will see his or her
own reflection mirrored in black dots. By seeing your own reflection in
these images, you are forced to question your role in the context of
environmental degradation – you see yourself unmistakably as part of the
picture, not only as an uninvolved observer. In Coal Goals and Peat
Pile, Kahilaniemi reflects upon the enormous amount of coal and peat
extracted to provide for the insatiable need for energy. Like an
infographic, white dots in Coal Goals present the use of coal from the
coal mountain in Merihaka, close to Helsinki. Each dot represents
Helsinki’s monthly usage of coal from 2000 to 2018. Though this work is
scientifically substantiated and has a political connotation, the white
dots have an aesthetic appeal, which leaves the viewer with a contradictory feeling. It is remarkable how Kahilaniemi connects the
accuracy of an scientific approach with a poetic view of nature.
His
conceptual work Fistful of Peace illustrates this notion very clearly.
The photograph pictures five olive trees, which Kahilaniemi has planted
as a symbol for peace in the clear-cut forest in the Tampere region in
Finland. The olive trees could not even survive their first winter in
this barren earth and cold landscape. A red line, burnt in on the
surface of the glass, marks the over 3800 km long journey those olive
trees had traveled from Greece to Finland. The line runs down like a painful crack, a trail of blood or a red thread – the associations can
be wide. This work raises the question: is it possible to make peace
between nature and humans? Kahilaniemi leaves the question open and
focuses on us as questioners instead. Even if they show us the
environmental damage in unsparing black and white, Kahilaniemi's works
always incorporate a glimmer of hope: just as one is part of the
destruction of nature, one can also be part of the reconstruction. His
works do not neglect the possibility of creating peace between nature
and humankind – even if it only lasts for a summer.
Jaakko
Kahilaniemi was born in 1989 in Toijala, Finland. He lives and works in
Helsinki. Kahilaniemi studied Photography at Aalto University,
School of Arts, Design, and Architecture, where he graduated in 2018.
His work was presented in group exhibitions, including New Perspectives
Through Photography – 25 years of the Helsinki School, Taidehalli
(Helsinki, 2021), A Fresh Freeze From the North!, Kunsthalle St. Annen
(Lübeck, 2020) and Nurture, Nature, Galerie David Behning (Düsseldorf,
2020), and solo exhibitions, including, 100 Hectares of Understanding,
The Finnish Museum of Photography (Helsinki, 2016). He was a finalist
for the Grand Prix Tokyo International Photo Competition in 2019, won
the ING Unseen Talent Award at Unseen Amsterdam in 2018 and was a finalist for the grand prix du jury photographien at the Festival de
Hyères in 2018.
Image: Jaakko Kahilaniemi, Mining Your Business, 2020
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