June 13 — June 18 2022

Liv Dysthe Sønderland and Sara Wilhelmsen
You will not erase me

Img 0575

In 2021, artist Liv Dysthe Sønderland and actress Sara Wilhelmsen received a production grants from MRK for one of the projectweeks in Møre and Romsdal. Due to the situation with continued covid restrictions, presentation and artist talks were postponed until 2022.

13-18 June 2022, the project is presented in the gallery with film, performance and conversations.

You will not erase me is a project about the assimilation policy towards the nomadic group of people called Tater in Norway, often called travellers, a branch of the Romani people who have been residents in Norway and Sweden since 1500.

Liv Dysthe Sønderland is a visual artist mainly working with drawing, printing, film and performance. In 2019, she received a request from Kunstmuseet Kube in Ålesund to create a work based on the Svanviken work colony for romani travelers, which was located on Eide in Møre og Romsdal. This was the beginning of her research on the history of the travelers. The work “Going Gray” was on display at the Art Museum in Ålesund until October 2021. While developing the project, Sønderland contacted several people with a Romani traveler background to anchor her understanding of the history among the people themselves. This is how she met Sara Wilhelmsen, and they then developed the collaborative art project when they were granted production support / Project Weeks 2021 from MRK. https://www.livdysthe.no/

Sara Wilhelmsen is from Molde. She is an actress and represents a young generation of Romani who have grown up with the aftermath of assimilation policies. She has always been interested in the history of her people. She did not understand why those around her would keep their romani identity hidden. As a 21-year-old, she wrote her own play based on her family, which also incorporated politics and greater society’s pressure on the ethnic group. It was performed at Riksscenen in Oslo, Glomdalsmuseet in Elverum and Innlandet Teater in Hamar. Wilhelmsen is one of the few exceptions in the Romani population who is open and expressing heself about her family background. She is brave, and she is a role model for other young people of Romani lineage, but also a role model for all young people who find it difficult to be open about identity.

Mateo R. Christensen (b. 1997) is a filmmaker and photographer. He grew up on Valderøya, Møre and Romsdal and has studied film at Danvik Folk High School and Einar Granum Art College in Oslo. Has worked with a number of artists and on various film productions. In 2021, he completed the short film «MAUR» which premiered at Amandus short film festival in Lillehammer and had a screening at the West Nordic International Short Film Festival in Ålesund in 2021. https://www.mateofilms.no/