At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia

This paper considers the photographic image, not as the evidential trace of a landscape or of an history, but as an artefact that appears to offer certainty whilst evading a definitive reading. The specific terrains covered in the paper are those remote landscapes along Finland’s arctic borders with...

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Main Authors: Brind, Susan, Harold, Jim
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/4831/
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spelling ftglasgowsarts:oai:radar.gsa.ac.uk:4831 2023-05-15T14:23:03+02:00 At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia Brind, Susan Harold, Jim 2016-07-04 http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/4831/ unknown At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia Brind, Susan <http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/view/creators/244.html> and Harold, Jim <http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/view/creators/391.html> (2016) At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia. In: Northern Light: Landscape Photography and Evocations of the North, 4-5 July 2016, Sheffield Hallam University. Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed 2016 ftglasgowsarts 2021-08-08T10:19:37Z This paper considers the photographic image, not as the evidential trace of a landscape or of an history, but as an artefact that appears to offer certainty whilst evading a definitive reading. The specific terrains covered in the paper are those remote landscapes along Finland’s arctic borders with Sweden and Norway, and its more controlled border with Russia. These wilderness regions – or desarts as they were deemed to be by many early travellers – are set at the limits of cultural boundaries and of commercial productivity (hence the appellation, desarts). To photograph in such environments is itself to be placed, ‘At the Limit of Reliable Information’, and the ensuing images, we would argue, mirror that state. This paper takes the form of three visits to key border sites: 1) The Tornio River, just south of the Arctic Circle – the focus of the 18th century mathematician, de Maupertuis’, research into the curvature of the earth – that provides the border-line between Finland and Sweden. 2) The north-western arctic lake area and fell region of Kilpisjärvi and Saana Fell – an area sacred to the indigenous Sámi people – where the Swedish, Norwegian and Finnish borders meet. 3) The only sanctioned border crossing between Finland and Russia in the Arctic Circle known as, Raja-Jooseppi (Joseph’s Border). Through a sequential discussion of the characteristics and historical relevance of each of the three sites, this paper will consider both the contrasting inscriptions placed upon such remote landscapes, and their palimpsest-like nature. In the light of contemporary theories regarding representation and the photographic image, this paper will also suggest that the emerging images from such journeys are not simply the depictions of sites or places (documents) but that they become the poetic embodiments of the wilderness they represent. Conference Object Arctic Arctic Kilpisjärvi Sámi Glasgow School of Art: RADAR Arctic Arctic Lake ENVELOPE(-130.826,-130.826,57.231,57.231) Kilpisjärvi ENVELOPE(20.767,20.767,69.034,69.034) Norway Raja-Jooseppi ENVELOPE(28.462,28.462,68.465,68.465) Saana ENVELOPE(20.859,20.859,69.043,69.043) Tornio ENVELOPE(24.147,24.147,65.848,65.848)
institution Open Polar
collection Glasgow School of Art: RADAR
op_collection_id ftglasgowsarts
language unknown
description This paper considers the photographic image, not as the evidential trace of a landscape or of an history, but as an artefact that appears to offer certainty whilst evading a definitive reading. The specific terrains covered in the paper are those remote landscapes along Finland’s arctic borders with Sweden and Norway, and its more controlled border with Russia. These wilderness regions – or desarts as they were deemed to be by many early travellers – are set at the limits of cultural boundaries and of commercial productivity (hence the appellation, desarts). To photograph in such environments is itself to be placed, ‘At the Limit of Reliable Information’, and the ensuing images, we would argue, mirror that state. This paper takes the form of three visits to key border sites: 1) The Tornio River, just south of the Arctic Circle – the focus of the 18th century mathematician, de Maupertuis’, research into the curvature of the earth – that provides the border-line between Finland and Sweden. 2) The north-western arctic lake area and fell region of Kilpisjärvi and Saana Fell – an area sacred to the indigenous Sámi people – where the Swedish, Norwegian and Finnish borders meet. 3) The only sanctioned border crossing between Finland and Russia in the Arctic Circle known as, Raja-Jooseppi (Joseph’s Border). Through a sequential discussion of the characteristics and historical relevance of each of the three sites, this paper will consider both the contrasting inscriptions placed upon such remote landscapes, and their palimpsest-like nature. In the light of contemporary theories regarding representation and the photographic image, this paper will also suggest that the emerging images from such journeys are not simply the depictions of sites or places (documents) but that they become the poetic embodiments of the wilderness they represent.
format Conference Object
author Brind, Susan
Harold, Jim
spellingShingle Brind, Susan
Harold, Jim
At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia
author_facet Brind, Susan
Harold, Jim
author_sort Brind, Susan
title At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia
title_short At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia
title_full At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia
title_fullStr At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia
title_full_unstemmed At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia
title_sort at the limits of reliable information: finland's arctic borders with sweden, norway and russia
publishDate 2016
url http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/4831/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.826,-130.826,57.231,57.231)
ENVELOPE(20.767,20.767,69.034,69.034)
ENVELOPE(28.462,28.462,68.465,68.465)
ENVELOPE(20.859,20.859,69.043,69.043)
ENVELOPE(24.147,24.147,65.848,65.848)
geographic Arctic
Arctic Lake
Kilpisjärvi
Norway
Raja-Jooseppi
Saana
Tornio
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Lake
Kilpisjärvi
Norway
Raja-Jooseppi
Saana
Tornio
genre Arctic
Arctic
Kilpisjärvi
Sámi
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Kilpisjärvi
Sámi
op_relation At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia Brind, Susan <http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/view/creators/244.html> and Harold, Jim <http://radar.gsa.ac.uk/view/creators/391.html> (2016) At the Limits of Reliable Information: Finland's Arctic Borders with Sweden, Norway and Russia. In: Northern Light: Landscape Photography and Evocations of the North, 4-5 July 2016, Sheffield Hallam University.
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