The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo

Large parts of the Munch collection have never been displayed in recent times. When the new Munch Museum opens in Oslo next year, old treasures from the Edvard Munch collection will be brought out of the vaults.

Among them are also sketches showing how “The Scream” looked before the world-famous version. Though the Norwegian artist is known for a single image, he was one of the most prolific, innovative and influential figures in modern art.

“The Scream quickly became a symbol of modern malaise after it was first painted in 1893. However, Edvard Munch made three more versions by 1910, one of which would go on to sell for a record-breaking $119.9 million at Sotheby’s in 2012.

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo
Despair, sketch by Edvard Munch

Related: The Edvard Munch Museum in Oslo On the Move

The Munch Museum Oslo’s Collection
The museum’s collection of Edvard Munch’s art counts over 25,000 works, of which well over half are collected at the Munch Museum at Tøyen in Oslo. When Edvard Munch, Norway’s only artist of international format, died in 1944 at the age of 80, it became known that he had bequeathed everything he owned to the City of Oslo. An intricate handwriting from 18 April 1940, proves that Edvard Munch leaves his entire art collection to Oslo municipality. Behind locked doors on the second floor of his house, the authorities discovered the document.

Some years ago, the museum also gathered pictures of all the artist’s drawings in a new database which now have been published for unrestricted use.

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo
Edvard Munch, Death at the Helmet

His paintings were his children
Born in December 12, 1863 near rural Løten, Norway, the artist experienced a long and prolific career. Edvard Munch never married and hated to be separated from his paintings which he called his children. The last 27 years of his life he lived alone on his estate outside Oslo, increasingly revered and increasingly isolated. He surrounded himself with work that dated to the start of his long career.

Related: The Universality of Loneliness at the Edvard Munch Museum in Oslo

The City of Oslo inherited 1,100 paintings, 15,500 prints, 4,700 drawings and six sculptures. Woodcuts, etchings, lithographs, lithographic stones, woodcut blocks, copperplates, notebooks, documents, photographs, tools, supplies and furniture were also part of the legacy. Edvard Munch’s reputation as one of the greatest visual artists in art history makes the collection unique.

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo
In 1906, Munch painted a posthumous portrait of famous German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche

A tragic childhood
The first years of Edvard’s life were a tragedy. His mother died from tuberculosis in 1868, when he was just five years old. His older sister, Sophia, died from the same disease nine years later. But life had to go on and initially he trained as an engineer at the Royal Technical College in Kristiania (now Oslo). After a year he dropped out to become a painter instead. He studied at the Kristiania Royal School of Art and Design, and in 1883 he made his debut at a local Industry and Art Exhibition. With financial support from his community, he managed to exhibit in Antwerp and study in Paris in his early twenties.

Edvard Munch, the artist
From 1892 to 1896, Munch lived in Berlin. The city’s intellectual community, which included Swedish playwright August Strindberg and Norwegian sculptor Gustav Vigeland, furthered his interest in exploring the joys and disappointments of love. In 1906, Munch even painted a posthumous portrait of famous German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, whose nihilist beliefs coincide with the Scream’s depiction of existential dread.

The artist’s father, a military physician, passed away in 1889. So, it is understandable that much of Munch’s work focuses on loss. “The Sick Child” (1885) for instance shows a woman kneeling at the bedside of a pale, red-haired girl, appearing to mourn an impending death.

Related: The Munch Museum in Oslo

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo
The new Munch Museum makes it possible to display a larger part of the artist’s collection for national and international audiences

Days and nights among artists
In the book “Days and nights amongst artists”, Christian Skredsvig, artist and a friend of Edvard Munch, describes how Munch became frustrated by how people would only notice the clouds in his pictures and not the anxiety:

«He had long wanted to paint his memory of a sunset, red as blood. No, it was clotted blood. But no one would feel the same way as him. Everyone would think of clouds. He spoke with great sadness about this event that had struck him with fear. Sadness, because the means of art were inadequate…» wrote Skredsvig.

Munch wrote extensively
“My fear of life is necessary to me, as is my illness,” Edvard Munch once wrote. “Without anxiety and illness, I am a ship without a rudder….My sufferings are part of myself and my art. They are indistinguishable from me, and their destruction would destroy my art.” Much of Munch’s work can be seen as self-portraiture.

Munch wrote extensively on what was perhaps his favorite subject: himself. He penned some 13,000 pages of autobiographical notes, novel and short story fragments, prose, poems, correspondence, and meditations on art. Munch’s melancholy writings often focused on the same topics as many of his paintings: nature, isolation, and longing.

“Death at the helm” (1803) is one of Munch’s lesser-known motives, despite being painted the same year as “The Scream.” Nevertheless, the painting has thematic commonalities. Munch defined how we see our own age—wracked with anxiety and uncertainty.

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo
The sick child, by Edvard Munch

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo
The new Munch Museum makes it possible to display a larger part of the artist’s collection for national and international audiences. An inspiration has been the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, which has contributed a lot to Van Gogh’s fame.

The new Munch Museum will consist of three parts, one with permanent and changing exhibitions of Munch’s art, one with heavily relevant exhibitions by Munch’s contemporary artist colleagues and one with contemporary art by the model of the Stenersen Museum in Oslo.

The passionate museum director Stein-Olav Henrichen  says that everything Edvard Munch ever created will be on display at the new museum – but of course not simultaneously.

The Edvard Munch Collection Out of the Vaults in Oslo, written by Tor Kjolberg

Danish Rubbish Bin Conquers the World

It all started in a small Danish town in 1929, just before the second world war. Holger Nielsen was newly married and owned a small engineering company that was not making much money. One day his wife asked him to make a rubbish bin for her newly opened hairdressing salon. Eventually, the Danish rubbish bin should conquer the world.

With only his wife’s need in mind he made just one pedal bin. But when both the local dentist and the doctor said they also wanted one, Holger Nielsen started mass producing them. They were called VIPP bins, and over the next 50 years the sturdy pedal bin became a familiar sight in Danish hairdressers, hospitals and surgeries.

Danish Rubbish Bin Conquers the World
Vipp Mega Bin in Copenhagen

Related: 100 Icons of Nordic Cool and Scandinavian Style

The youngest daughter takes over the company
Holger Nielsen was a conservative man, who could never imagine that any of his daughters would take over his engineering workshop. When he died suddenly in 1992, his wife prepared to sell the company. But her youngest daughter, Jette Egelund, could not bear to see her father’s life work disappear.

She took over the company with no previous knowledge of engineering. The job was tough, both financially and personally. The problem mounted up. In the first difficult years she had only a couple of employees. Her marriage broke down, as did the metal press at the workshop. Butte Jette refused to give up.

Related: Please be Seated in Danish Furniture

For she had the vision: to see her father’s rubbish bin become a designer product.

Danish Rubbish Bin Conquers the World
Vipp in museum

Danish Rubbish Bin Conquers the World
Jette’s perseverance was eventually rewarded. A visit to Terence Conran in London did not at first lead to a positive response. But Jette was stubborn. She left a bin behind at his office. A week later came the first order for 30 pedal bins!

Related: Finn Juhl – The Golden Age of Danish Design

After a fantastic period of growth, VIPP bins are now sold in designer stores in Europe and the USA. It has even ended up being put in a museum, side by side with other design icons. In 2009, the bin was accepted into the permanent design collection at the MoMA in New York – the only place in the world where the bin is just for decoration.

Danish Rubbish Bin Conquers the World, written by Tor Kjolberg

Arabic Culture Tower Designed by Norwegian Architects

The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture also called Ithra in Arabic, or مركز الملك عبد العزيز الثقافي العالمي), was inaugurated by King Salman bin Abdulaziz on 1 December 2017. The Arabic Culture Tower designed by Norwegian architects has been listed in Time magazine as the world’s top 100 places to visit.

In 2008, Norwegian architectural firm Snøhetta won the competition to design a massive cultural center for the world’s largest oil company Saudi Aramco. The building was to be erected in Saudi Arabia’s oil capital Dharan on the occasion of the oil company’s 75th anniversary in 2011.

Related: Shanghai Great Opera House

 

Promoting knowledge
“Through promoting knowledge, inspiring creativity, and encouraging innovation, we can unleash the most important energy source there is: human potential,” wrote Aramco in its project description back then.

This was an evolution of a far-reaching earlier vision. When the original concession agreement between Saudi Arabia and Standard Oil Company of California was signed on May 20, 1933, King ‘Abd al-‘Aziz Al Sa‘ud insisted on including a clause directing the company to provide opportunities for Saudi citizens.

Arabic Culture Tower Designed by Norwegian Architects
From Ihtra – the Great Hall

80 thousand square meters building
Today, the cultural center Ithra, an 80 thousand square meters building and the surrounding 220,000 square meter Knowledge Park, provides for a wide range of activities serving the local population and becoming a cultural landmark on a regional, national, and global horizon. The building is characterized with integrity and comprehensiveness and contains diverse cultural facilities, including an auditorium, cinema, library, exhibition hall, museum, and archive. It has a unique design that combines between the center’s mission and the external shape.

Related: The Stunning Opera House in Oslo

Arabic Culture Tower Designed by Norwegian Architects
The great exhibition hall will accommodate large scale travelling exhibitions, as well as providing the setting for social events, banquets, and conferences.

The design focuses on the geological nature of the Kingdom, using an assortment of different-sized “rocks”, which symbolize diversity. These rocks lean on one another to illustrate solidarity, and show that the various disciplines explored in the building all depend on one another. The historical factor is also considered in the internal design of the building. Thus, the underground floors are allocated to present the past, the ground floor is for the present and the topmost Knowledge Tower is allocated for the future.

Wide range of events
The auditorium will seat 930 visitors and will provide for a wide range of events ranging from opera, symphony concerts, musicals, speeches etc. Together with the smaller cinema, this will be an unrivalled venue for the performing arts in the Kingdom.

Arabic Culture Tower Designed by Norwegian Architects
The museum exhibits international and local exhibitions that shed the line on the developing and modern art movement and the rich historical roots and in Saudi Arabia.

The museum exhibits international and local exhibitions that shed the line on the developing and modern art movement and the rich historical roots in Saudi Arabia.

Related: Norwegian Architects in Lebanon

The library will become a center for learning, containing some 200 000 books on open access, and catering for all ages and categories of users.

The great exhibition hall will accommodate large scale travelling exhibitions, as well as providing the setting for social events, banquets, and conferences. The museum and archive facilities connect the vibrant cultural life of the center to the past and to the very roots of the society from which this center is conceived.

Arabic Culture Tower Designed by Norwegian Architects
King Abdulaziz

Enrichment
iThra’ is the Arabic word for ‘enrichment’ and the culture tower promises a continuous journey of enrichment, using science, innovation, arts and culture to inspire creativity and a love of learning, helping to transform Saudi Arabia into a knowledge economy.

Arabic Culture Tower Designed BY Norwegian Architects
“Although Aramco was nationalized in the 1980s, it is still a global company with a global culture. With this project, it will build cultural relations – with the country’s first public theater / library and cinema,” said architect Astrid Renata van Veen in Snøhetta in 2011.

Diversity and unity
“This design takes the form of a complex composition, consisting of a number of individual and discrete components. Balance and harmony are created through interdependence. Each component is fashioned as a unique and tailor-made entity, conforming to and expressive of its own individual needs and requirements,” says the architects.

Ithra is located in the same place of which the first Saudi discovered oilfield. The center has been listed in Time magazine as the world’s top 100 places to visit.

Arabic Culture Tower Designed BY Norwegian Architects, written by Tor Kjolberg

The Voyages of a Modern Viking

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Everybody think of Roald Amundsen when they’re asked who was first explorer to reach the North Pole. However, without the assistance of Helmer Julius Hanssen, Amundsen might not have succeeded. Here is a short presentation of the voyages of a modern Viking.

Helmer Julius Hanssen was born on 24 September 1870 in Bjørnskinn (now Andøya) in Vesterålen, and he participated in three of the polar expeditions led by Roald Amundsen, and was one of a five-man group that reached the South Pole as the first on 14 December 1911.

The Voyages of a Modern Viking
Julius Hanssen participated in three of the polar expeditions led by Roald Amundsen. Photo: Store norske leksikon

He earned his mate’s certificate at age 27
His father was a farmer and fisherman and from 11 years of age Helmer combined farm work with fishing in Lofoten and Finnmark in Northern Norway with his father.

While hunting small whales and seals around Spitsbergen he learned to become an experienced pilot. In 1877, when Hanssen was 27, he earned his mate’s certificate and joined Briton Henry J. Pearson’s Arctic Ocean expedition aboard the SS Laura to Novaya Zemlya (islands to the southeast of Svalbard). In the same year Hanssen married Kristine Berg, they had three children.

The Voyages of a Modern Viking
Julius Hanssen was one of a five-man group that reached the South Pole as the first on 14 December 1911. Photo: Store norske leksikon

Hanssen meets Amundsen
While SS Laura was in Sandefjord prior to start, Hanssen met Roald Amundsen, who was preparing for the Belgian expedition with the Belgicato Antarctica. The following year Hanssen was the skipper of the sealer Elida. Before he had sailed for five years on coastal and overseas routes, amongst others for the Vesterålen Steamship Company (Vesteraalens Dampskibsselskab).

Related: A Norwegian Heritage

From 1903-6, Hanssen was second mate among a crew of just six onboard the herring boat Gjøa on Roald Amundsen’s successful search for the Northwest passage. The link between the Pacific and the Atlantic had long been sought as a trade route and Amundsen’s expedition made the journey from Oslo to Alaska. For two years they were stranded on King William Island, where Hanssen learned from the Inuit how to drive sled dogs.

The Voyages of a Modern Viking
Picture of the explorers

Heading south to conquer the South Pole
In 1910 he headed south with Amundsen to conquer the South Pole, this time as an expert dog driver. He was also in charge of navigation, carrying the master compass on his sledge. In 1915 he gained his skipper’s license.

Because of his previous good work, Amundsen hired Hanssen to serve as captain on the s/s Maud through the Northeast Passage in 1918-20. His sledding expertise came in handy during this expedition, after the s/s Maud was stuck in the Arctic sea ice. Hanssen led the dogs on a 1500 km journey in order to send telegrams for Amundsen. The return journey to s/s Maud took Hanssen approximately 6½ months’ time, and 4000 km. Historians estimate that at the time, Hanssen’s trip was a dog sledding record.

The Voyages of a Modern Viking
The Voyages of a Modern Viking, bookcover

Related: Welcome Back to Norway, Maud

The Voyages of a Modern Viking
From 1928 until his retirement in 1940, Hanssen worked as a ship surveyor in Tromsø. He published his autobiography The Voyages of a Modern Viking, in 1936. He died in Tromsø on 2 August 1956.

Feature image (on top): THe Helmer Hansen Monument in Tromsø.

The Voyages of a Modern Viking, written by Tor Kjolberg

Handmade Danish Jewelry

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From a small workshop in Aarhus, Denmark, Louise Kragh Jewelry has handcrafted unique porcelain earrings, bracelets and much more since 2004. This is handmade Danish jewelry at its best. 

A piece of Louise Kragh Jewelry has its very own glow which is being enhanced when placed on your finger, around your wrist or neck, or as an elegant greeting on your ear.  By embracing natural elements and color Louise Kragh creates jewelry that focuses on the simplicity and honesty of design

Handmade Danish Jewelry
By embracing natural elements and color Louise Kragh creates jewelry that focuses on the simplicity and honesty of design

Related: Danish Jewelry Designer Driven by the Impossible

If you want to go classic, you can choose black and white. If you want to space up your look, you can go for bright reds and yellow. The graphic and simple look has an honesty that embrace both the natural and colorful.

Handmade Danish Jewelry
All the pieces of Louise Kragh Jewelry focus on craftmanship and tradition and are handmade in the heart of Aarhus. Each piece has a unique finish and today, the brand is sold in selected shops all around the world.

Related: Uncompromising Danish Jewelry Designer

4 annual collections
Louise Kragh releases 4 annual collections, all designed and produced by hand at the headquarters in Aarhus. The rich colors of the individual pieces sit beautifully against the metal used, adding a hint of sparkle and glamorous sophistication.

Handmade Danish Jewelry
Louise Kragh releases 4 annual collections
Handmade Danish Jewelry
All the pieces of Louise Kragh Jewelry focus on craftmanship and tradition and are handmade in the heart of Aarhus.

Related: Rough Diamonds from Copenhagen

Local production
Denmark has a strong tradition for local production and the company has no plans to move away from the picturesque city of Aarhus. The beautiful designs have been the essence of Louise Kragh since the birth of the brand in 2004.

Handmade Danish Jewelry, written by Tor Kjolberg

Jaw-dropping Boutique Hotel Designed for Norway

The 2,000 feet famous Pulpit Rock (Preikestolen) overhanging the Lysefjorden Fjord in Ryfylke, Norway might allow daredevil visitors the chance to literally stay on the edge. The Istanbul-based architects Hayri Atak Architectural Design Studio has designed a guesthouse climbing down from the top of the Pulpit Rock that includes a cantilevered glass swimming pool. This jaw-dropping boutique hotel designed for Norway might however ending up being an architect’s dream only.

The studio wanted to create a small hotel being a natural part of the rock calling it the Cliff Concept Boutique Hotel. The five-story boutique hotel will be accessible via a “rooftop entrance” doubling as a towering observation deck.

Jaw-dropping Boutique Hotel Designed for Norway
The Cliff Concept Boutique Hotel

Related: Artistic Architecture in Norway and Newfoundland

Jaw-dropping Boutique Hotel Designed for Norway
The project is characterized with undulating balconies that are shaped according to the form of the rock. The hotel will only have nine rooms and one restaurant and café. “Preikestolen has been one of the most exciting places to me through the years. One day a friend of mine sent me photos of ‘the rock’ she captured during her Norway trip,” explained the studio’s founder Hayri Atak.

So far, there is no information about the length of the pool cantilevering from the rock, but if built, the boutique hotel seems to offer amazing views over fjords and the Norwegian mountains. “Even though I wasn’t there,” says Atak, “I experienced the adrenaline of being on the edge.”

Jaw-dropping Boutique Hotel Designed for Norway
The five-story boutique hotel will be accessible via a “rooftop entrance”

Related: The Unique Energy Design Hotel in Norway

Hayri Atak Architectural Design Studio
Interior architect Hayri Atak was born in Eskişehir. Atak established his Hayri Atak Architectural Design Studio in 2017 in Istanbul. He has received awards from many design competitions during his academic and professional life, both as an individual and a group.

The design studio’s visuals imagine the entrance to the hotel on top of the cliff, which has a naturally flat surface. This would also double as a giant public viewing platform. Atak has experience in a wide scope of interior and architectural projects including hotel design, cafe/restaurant design, store concept design, villa design, clinical design, housing design and facade design.

Jaw-dropping Boutique Hotel Designed for Norway
Pulpit Rock (Preikestolen)

Related: World’s Largest Sauna – in Norway 

It must, however, be emphasized that this incredible hotel project is still very much in the early stages.

Jaw-dropping Boutique Hotel Designed for Norway, written by Tor Kjolberg

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia

TNT Theatre in BRITAIN & ADG EUROPE are proud to present William Shakespeare’s most popular comedy A Midsummer Night’s Dream at several Scandinavian venues in August/September. Thanks to the TNT Theatre Group, it’s still midsummer in Scandinavia.

The story follows the fortunes of a quartet of lover’s who are lured into the forest by fairies who trick them with a magic potion that forces them to fall in love with the first person they see. Sadly, the Queen of Fairies herself takes the potion and when a donkey crosses her path she falls in love with the beast.

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia
This hilarious comedy explores the madness of love and laughs

This hilarious comedy explores the madness of love and laughs at human folly. It contains some of the finest poetry that Shakespeare wrote, slapstick comedy, touching love scenes, mystery and theatrical magic.

Related: Welcome to Literary Copenhagen

Love is random
The TNT production has been an extraordinary global success, performing hundreds of times across three continents and even being re-staged in Mandarin.  This is Shakespeare that is easy to understand and enjoy, even for an audience whose first language is not English.  Specially original music composed by Paul Flush is woven into the production as is choreography, poetry and above all comedy, led by one of the Bard’s greatest clowns: Bottom the hopeless amateur actor.

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia
A Midsummer Night’s Dream contains some of the finest poetry that Shakespeare wrote

In a MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Shakespeare explores the idea that love is random, that we are in love with ourselves rather than the person we supposedly adore, that the eyes deceive us as to a person’s true worth and the consequences are sometimes tragic but often comic.

Related: Macbeth Visits Scandinavia

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia
The production is directed by Paul Stebbings

Global success
The production is directed by Paul Stebbings and presented by TNT Theatre Britain. Their cycle of Shakespearian classics include HAMLET, MACBETH, ROMEO & JULIET and the TAMING OF THE SHREW – productions that have received popular and critical acclaim in over thirty countries worldwide performing in theatres and palaces from Tokyo to Berlin and Windsor Castle to Prague Castle. This is Shakespeare as might have graced the original Globe: funny, direct, visual, musical and appealing to any and every audience.

Related: To Be or Not to Be at Hamlet’s Elsinore

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia
This is Shakespeare that is easy to understand and enjoy, even for an audience whose first language is not English

Highly acclaimed performances
“I never knew Shakespeare could be so entertaining,” claimed  CNN TV

“The cast had the audience in stitches of laughter with their wonderful comic timing….this production’s twin achievement is to make Shakespeare’s comedy both hilarious and clear….This classic production is both a real achievement and a comic hoot,” wrote STRAITS TIMES Singapore

“TNT are one of the most interesting developments on the current theatrical scene” according to the THE GUARDIAN,  London

Musical Director is Helen Beauchamp.

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia
In a MIDSUMMER NIGHT’S DREAM Shakespeare explores the idea that love is random

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia
Performances in Scandinavia:

COPENHAGEN 22 August, 2pm & 6pm: Rosenborg Garden

MOSTERØY 25 August, 6pm
: Ulstein Kloster

BERGEN 26 August, 6pm Bergenshus Festning.

BØ, TELEMARK  27 August, 7pm: Gullbring Kulturanlegg

HAMAR 28 August 6 pm: Hamardomen

VAXHOLM 30 August, 6pm Bogesunds Slott

AABENRAA 5 September, 6pm, Kunstmuseet, Brundlund Slot

KRISTIANSTAD 6 September: Bäckaskog Slott.

STOCKHOLM 9 September 2pm & 6pm: Kungliga Djurgarden

The performances will take place under all weather conditions.

Tickets Denmark:  DKK 200 adults/DKK 90 students/pupils
Tickets Norway:    NOK 300 adults/NOK 150 students/pupils
Tickets Sweden:    SEK 300 adults/SEK 150 students/pupils

All images, copyright TNT Théâtre -American Drama Group Europe.

It’s Still Midsummer in Scandinavia, based on a press release from TNT Théâtre -American Drama Group Europe.

New Norwegian Film: The Worst Person in the World

The new Norwegian film “The Worst Person in the World” will be the closing chapter of Norwegian film director Joachim Trier’s “Oslo Trilogy,” which includes his feature debut, “Reprise,” and “Oslo, August 31st”.

The title might suggest a political satire of America today, but the film written by Trier and his usual collaborator Eskil Vogt is a film that follows the character of Julie over four years as she “navigates the troubled waters of her love life and struggles to find her career path, leading her to take a realistic look at who she really is.”

New Norwegian Film: The Worst Person in the World
Anders Danielsen Lie plays the leading male role.

New Norwegian film – 5 Million Dollar Project
The fiction movie has received funding of NOK 9,075,000 (€937,000) from the Norwegian Film Institute. Paris-based MK2 films has come on board to co-produce and sell internationally Joachim Trier’s newest movie, while more partners are expected to join during the production. The total budget is NOK 47.7 million (€4,925,000).

“After years of wanting to work with Joachim Trier, one of the strongest and most original voices to emerge from Europe, we are honored to be partnering with him and Thomas Robsahm’s new company Oslo Pictures on this bold and resoundingly modern film,” said MK2 director Juliette Schrameck.

New Norwegian Film: The Worst Person in the World
Anders Danielsen Lie (left) and Joachim Trier

Ambitious Joachim Trier
Renate Reinsve plays Julie as her firs leading role. The actress has previously appeared in the TV series Almost Adult, and she also had a small role in Oslo, August 31st. Anders Danielsen-Lie, who previously starred in the other two films in Trier’s trilogy, plays the leading male role.

Each of Trier’s films seems to be more ambitious than the last. His other credits include “Louder Than Bombs” with Jesse Eisenberg, Gabriel Byrne and Isabelle Huppert, which competed in Cannes. His latest film, “Thelma,” played at Toronto and was the Norwegian submission for foreign-language film Oscar in 2017.

 

Shooting films in Norway
When Trier was asked by a journalist why he had chosen to shoot his films in Norway instead of for instance in the USA, Trier replied: “There is something specific about Norway…. I thought that it was different, but it’s very much the same. America also has a Bible Belt. It also has a tremendous gap between New York and the South, or certain Midwestern parts of culture. It’s in fact quite similar, but it’s a grander, a bigger scope of what we have on a smaller scale in Norway. The journey of coming from rural, as you say, a different type of environment or milieu, into the more secularized or liberal city… that’s an American tale as well, isn’t it?”

New Norwegian Film: The Worst Person in the World
Renate Reinsve plays Julie as her firs leading role

Related: The Norwegian Musician, Model and Actress Okay Kaya

He concluded: “But I think there’s something specific about the Norwegians, our fairytale tradition, of our ambivalent relationship to nature. Norway is all about getting home from work at four o’clock and having a lot of free time to spend with nature and your family. That’s like if you are a healthy, functioning family — you are out skiing every Sunday.”

Feature image (on top): Joachim Trier

New Norwegian Film: The Worst Person in the World, written by Tor Kjolberg

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden

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“Recycling shopping’s beautiful new face,” wrote CNN about Re-tuna, the Swedish mall in Eskiltuna where everything sold are secondhand products. “The world’s recycling capital,” according to the Guardian. “Revolutionizing shopping in a climate-smart way,” said the Green Furniture Concept. A video created by the World Economic Forum about the center has been viewed more than 25 million times on Facebook. Read more about world’s first recycling mall – in Sweden

ReTuna shopping mall is a two-story complex of secondhand stores on the outskirts of Eskiltuna, a small riverside city 70 miles west of Stockholm. In 14 specialist shops covering everything from clothes to DIY tools, everything for sale is recycled.

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden
The items sorted out for resale are almost like new, so why should customers bother to buy new stuff?

Related: Norway’s Successful Plastic and Metal Recycling System

Visitors from over 28 different contries
Center manager Anna Bergström has welcomed visitors from 28 different countries and over 200 Swedish municipalities who wanted to know how to do the same. The mall opened its doors on August 28, 2015 and can in a few days celebrate its fourth birthday. It is located next to the city’s recycling center. The mall’s depot, called “Returen”, consists of containers where visitors can drop off reusable furniture, toys, clothes, electronic devices and decorative items.

 

Almost like new
The items sorted out for resale are almost like new, so why should customers bother to buy new stuff? For manager Anna Bergström, the mission is to bring secondhand shopping into the mainstream. ReTuna is set up in a warehouse which used to house trucks for a logistics company. The mall itself reminds us of an IKEA outlet, spacious and appealing, where interior as well as decorations are made from recycled materials. It was set up by Eskilstuna’s local government in 2015.

Related: Ecovillages in Scandinavia

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden
ReTuna Café

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden
Eskiltuna is a city with 70,000 inhabitants and 400 years of industrial history, an hour and a half journey from Stockholm. In an effort to survive industrial death, the city has invested heavily in a new environmentally friendly direction, in which ReTuna is just one of the initiatives. In the mall, there is even a coffee shop, Returama, and gift-wrapping service.

After the items returned are sorted from the depot “Returen”, they are distributed to the recycling shops where they have a second culling. The shop staff choose what they want to repair, convert, refine or fix up. The materials are then ultimately given a new life and ready for sale.

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden
Center manager Anna Bergström has welcomed visitors from 28 different countries and over 200 Swedish municipalities who wanted to know how to do the same

Supporting sustainability
Since the 1980s, Sweden has had a reputation for supporting sustainability. More than 99 percent of ordinary household waste in the country is recycled (although 50 percent of that is burned for energy). In recent years, there’s been a boom in demand for organic products and a resurgence in urban city gardening. The country has passed legislation compelling it to become a net zero greenhouse gas emitter by 2045.

Related: Climate-Smart Airports in Sweden

The mall is beautifully free of flashy music and advertising posters, and the exhibition dolls pose in a way no one has seen since the 1960’s. And it seems like the concept is working. In 2018, ReTuna had SEK 11.7 million (USD 1,22 mill) in sales for recycled products.

Fighting rising consumption
ReTuna is designed to help tackle rising consumption on a local level, promoting Eskilstuna as a “green role model” for other Swedish cities. The goal is to enhance the experience of shopping for secondhand goods by collecting niche stores under one roof.  The shops inside are run as businesses rather than charities, and each pays a combined charge of rent and business rates. The building is owned by the municipality and the average monthly rent for one shop is SEK 1,400 (USD 146).

When you sign a contract, you also promise to keep the waste at zero. It doesn’t always happen, but that’s the aim.

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden
The mall reminds us of an IKEA outlet, spacious and appealing, where interior as well as decorations are made from recycled materials

The mall has also played a role in generating employment for immigrants seeking their first taste of the Swedish labor market. Many of the stores use a national program which subsidizes the salaries of newly settled residents for up to two years. It also offers adult education courses focused on design-based recycling.

Shops for almost everyone
Among the shops we spotted were a sports shop stuffed with skis and (slightly scuffed) sledges, a bookshop, a DIY store, a kids’ shop bursting with toys (a little faded), a homeware specialist and even a pet accessory shop. The center is competing with regular shopping malls and is thus tied to standard business hours.

The storage hall at ReTuna is reminiscent of a scene from the “Toy-story” films. Grandfather clocks, chandeliers, board games, globes and saucers in perfect harmony piled high in cages along the walls and in heaps in the middle of the floor.

Not just a marketplace
However, ReTuna is more than just a marketplace. By organizing events, workshops, lectures and theme days, it aims to be a public educator, focusing on sustainability. The Eskiltuna High School conducts its one-year education program “Recycle Design – Återbruk” in the premises.

World’s First Recycling Mall – in Sweden, written by Tor Kjolberg

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season

Summer in Scandinavia is well and truly swinging, but it’s not too late to book a special trip with your other half. So, with that in mind we’ve put together this list of the top 10 romantic hotels to escape to in Scandinavia this season.

Denmark

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Hotel Nimb, Copenhagen

Nimb Hotel, Copenhagen

Let’s start in Copenhagen. From the outside, Nimb looks like a Moorish palace, but inside it’s anything but. The finest Scandinavian design makes this a comfortable and modern place to stay. But the best and most romantic part of Nimb Hotel is its location – it’s right in the middle of Tivoli Gardens, one of the oldest and most magical theme parks in the world. Besides having a theme park on your doorstep, there’s plenty to keep you and your other half entertained here. Enjoy the warm Nordic atmosphere, Nimb’s selection of restaurants and bars, and the rooftop infinity pool!

Read also: Pastry Days at Nimb Terrace

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Skovshoved Hotel, Charlottenlund

Skovshoved Hotel, Charlottenlund

What do you expect from a Danish summer? Well, forest bike rides, relaxing on the beach, and walks through quaint little harbours are just some of the things that Danes like to do in the warmest season of the year. Staying at Skovshoved Hotel in Charlottenlund means that you can do that too! It’s just a stone’s throw away from Copenhagen so you can split your time between city life and enjoying the Danish countryside. For couples, there’s even a summer offer which doesn’t only include the room price, but also a buffet breakfast and bike rental too!

Read also: Luxury by the Sea in Denmark

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Sonderho kro, Fanø

Sonderho Kro, Fano

This small and cosy inn is one of the oldest and best-preserved in the whole of Denmark. Sonderho Kro offers views of a unique marsh and tidal area, while being just steps away from a dyke. Each room has been individually decorated and while they’re in a newer building, they still incorporate classic Danish design to feel cosy and homely. If you want to have a memorable and romantic dinner, head to the restaurant. A 5 course meal selected by the chef with wine pairings here is the perfect end to a lovely day!

Read also: Gastronomic Fanoe in Denmark

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season:

Norway

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
The Thief Hotel, Oslo

The Thief, Oslo

This five star hotel right in the heart of Oslo is a luxury experience that you and your loved one will absolutely adore. Thief Islet used to be a home for smugglers, which is how the hotel got its name. However, now it’s one of the top hotels in Norway. There’s a spa, cutting edge Scandinavian furniture, and the walls are even adorned with international art! It’s not cheap, but escaping to The Thief is one big romantic gesture!

Read also: Selected Cocktail-bars in Oslo

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Ullensvanh hotel in Lofthus, Hardanger

Hotel Ullensvang, Lofthus

On the edge of Hardangerfjord about 130km from Bergen, Hotel Ullensvang is an incredible place to escape into nature. This would be suitable for combining a romantic trip with some active and outdoor stuff, as it’s a great place to base yourself if you plan on visiting Trolltunga (the Troll’s Tongue) and Dronningstien (The Queen’s Trail). This hotel has a swimming pool and its own private beach, so it’s got plenty of options to cool off after a long day of hiking!

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Juvet landscape hotel, Alstad

Juvet Landscape Hotel, Alstad

This unique hotel isn’t easy to find, but once you get here you will be astounded. Europe’s first landscape hotel, Juvet incorporates nature, modern architecture, and cultural history to supply an accommodation that really has the wow factor! After a meal in the barn (which is now a gorgeous restaurant) retire to one of the 9 unique rooms, each of which offers a unique perspective on the rugged Scandinavian landscape.

Read also: Four Seasons at Juvet Landscape Hotel

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Røisheim hotel, close to Jotunheimen National Park

Røisheim Hotel, Close to Jotunheimen National Park

Some of the most romantic Norwegian hotels are well away from the cities, and Røisheim Hotel is certainly one of them. It’s a base for mountaineering set at the border between Eastern and Western Norway. Mountaineering couples will love that it’s right in the shadow of Norway’s highest mountain, Galdhøpiggen. Enjoy the restored rooms and painted buildings in a version of Norway that’s like stepping back into the past!

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season:

Sweden

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Hotel Skeppsholmen, Stockholm

Hotel Skeppsholmen, Stockholm

Hotel Skeppsholmen markets itself as an urban oasis set in a 300 year old historical house, situated on one of Stockholm’s many waterfronts. A true escape from the hustle and bustle of the Swedish capital, it’s a great spot for couples on a long weekend! Easy access to the city centre sights, while still being an escape in the evenings. Enjoy contemporary Swedish cuisine, and art and design in a tranquil setting.

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Treehotel, Harads

Treehotel, Harads

This place is romantic, quirky, and totally unforgettable. Treehotel offers a number of capsules up in the trees, giving exquisite views of the forest surrounding Harads. Choose from the Mirror Cube, the Bird’s Nest, The UFO, the Dragonfly, and other intriguing designs to spend your night in. And if you actually want to leave your room during the day, you can enjoy barbeques by the lake, moose safaris, phat bike riding, canoeing, and many other activities. Another hotel that will cost a pretty penny but is worth every single one.

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season
Ulfsunds slott, Bromma

Ulfsunda Slott, Bromma

Of course, there’s a hotel in Stockholm’s nearest castle, Ulfsunda Slott. Just 15 minutes away from the centre of Stockholm and close to Bromma airport, here you can combine a romantic stay with a bit of history and also some exquisite cuisine and wine, from the hotel/castle’s very own wine cellar! The castle is also surrounded by beautiful gardens and if you’re lucky enough your room may even have a few of the jaw-dropping Mälaren Lake. This experience will be something special for both of you, and you’ll easily be able to get into Stockholm too!

Final Thoughts

So, that concludes our list of the best romantic hotels in Scandinavia. It’s a great area to go in the summer, but if you’re looking to head further south for some winter sun, then Greece could be just what you’re looking for! Why not take a look at the best vacation rentals in Athens here. Now, you have romantic summer AND winter vacation ideas!

All images, copyright the hotels

Top 10 Romantic Hotels to Escape to in Scandinavia This Season is a compilation produced for Daily Scandinavian by the editorial team of Trip 101.