The Finns are quite possibly the nicest and
most welcoming people I have ever met. They treat almost like you were part of
their family or a childhood friend; they were all so welcoming while I was
there (in both Helsinki and Rovaniemi) that I actually felt ‘home’ in a sense.
It was incredibly heart-warming and I immediately fell in love with both the
country and it’s people.
While I have loved all the places I have visited on this trip, Finland has been the only place where I felt I could be happy to live. I don’t want to leave Australia, but if there were any other place I could choose to call my new home then Finland would have top the list.
While I have loved all the places I have visited on this trip, Finland has been the only place where I felt I could be happy to live. I don’t want to leave Australia, but if there were any other place I could choose to call my new home then Finland would have top the list.
Alas, it pains me so much to be living so
far away. I wish I lived closer to Finland because I know I would definitely
visit the country as often as I could.
What attracts me to Finland is its
uniqueness, particularly against the Scandinavian countries (Norway, Sweden and
Denmark). What most people don’t know (including myself before I read about it)
is that although Finland is often classified as being part of Scandinavia, it
actually isn’t, the correct term that it is part of is the Nordic Countries.
Yet you can tell it really isn’t part of Scandinavia – it’s culture and lifestyle (and language) is so much different from Norway, Denmark and Sweden (although, it perhaps shares some similarities with Sweden since they border with each other). I found Norway, Denmark and Sweden were very similar in their culture, and their language is uncanny to each other (in fact the Norwegians can understand both the Swedes and the Danes); and this could be perhaps to them being under the same governing rule many years ago. Finland is really different – the language (COMPLETELY different), the people, the architecture, the designs, the lifestyle, the culture, etc, it’s all original – and I think perhaps this is why I fell in love with it, because of it’s originality and uniqueness. It’s not Scandinavian, it’s Finnish.
Yet you can tell it really isn’t part of Scandinavia – it’s culture and lifestyle (and language) is so much different from Norway, Denmark and Sweden (although, it perhaps shares some similarities with Sweden since they border with each other). I found Norway, Denmark and Sweden were very similar in their culture, and their language is uncanny to each other (in fact the Norwegians can understand both the Swedes and the Danes); and this could be perhaps to them being under the same governing rule many years ago. Finland is really different – the language (COMPLETELY different), the people, the architecture, the designs, the lifestyle, the culture, etc, it’s all original – and I think perhaps this is why I fell in love with it, because of it’s originality and uniqueness. It’s not Scandinavian, it’s Finnish.
So here’s how I tried to embrace the
Finnish life and culture with what Helsinki had to offer:
Thursday
– Kiasma
(Museum of Contemporary Art)
First stop was Kiasma (Museum of
Contemporary Art), I originally went there because I had read about an
exhibition that was featured there by Mika Taanila called “Time Machines” which
was an exhibition created with beautiful videos and challenges the art stemmed
from technology. However, while I enjoyed visiting this exhibition, Kiasma
offered so much more. The other exhibition they were showcasing was by Erkki
Kurenniemi called “Towards 2048” – this was incredibly cool, again it’s
exposure of technological innovations, but through music instead of film. Erkki
is Finnish and has designed and built many electronic instruments since the
1960s. Some of the inventions I had never seen before, and some of them exposed
sounds that were incredibly eerie and had tremendous affect on your mind. There
was on particular invention that really struck me – it was a chair with
speakers on either side of the head-rest; the person sitting in the chair then
had to connect wires to their head, then magic would happen because the wires
measured the frequencies coming from the person’s brain and it would convert
them into music – hence the aim was that whatever you were feeling, this
machine would turn it into music. Unfortunately I didn’t get to test it because
the machine was slightly broken, but I did read next to it that there are still
inventions being tested today to create something similar.
The other exhibition I really loved was
Kiasma Hits: it was some of the best art from over the 15 years the museum has
been open. Majority of the artwork is themed around the digital age, which I
absolutely loved since I am studying Communication & Media studies, so all
this stuff interests me greatly. I loved all the Kiasma Hits collection, but
there were a couple that really stood out and affected me. The first was by an
artist who sadly I can’t remember the name of – I walked into this room that
was empty and just had white blank walls, after reading the description it
stated that there were spots in the wall which would pick up the body
temperature when you touched it, and in response the wall would reverberate
this heat back to the person touching it. It was a really fun experience, and I
spent a good amount of time stroking the wall in all different places to find
these ‘spots’ and the feeling you get what heat is reverberated back to you, I
just can’t describe, it sort of feels like magic really. Speaking of ‘magic’,
the second artwork I really loved was by