Artist
Jonas Yang Tislevoll
Jonas Yang Tislevoll (b. 1993) was born as Jin Sub Yang in the city of Daegu. At 4-months old, he was given a new name by his adoptive parents in Fitjar, a small farming town in Western Norway. After studying photography in Oslo from 2019 to 2021, Yang Tislevoli moved back to South-Korea in the hope of finding his biological mother. This laid the foundation for the series, Take care of yourself son, your mom loves you. The project explores themes of identity, belonging, social issues, women's rights and adoption in South Korea. Yang Tislevoli does not see himself as a photographer, but as an individual who uses the medium of photography to tell stories that deserve to see the light of day.
Take care of yourself son, your mom loves you
Take care of yourself son, your mom loves you is a personal journey in time and a photographic exploration of family relations, adoption, my own story of being an adopted child, and the search for my biological mother.
South Korean adoption began in 1953 as a consequence of the Korean War. As of today, over 200,000 people have been adopted from the country, reaching its heights in the late 70s and early 80s. In 1985, over 8700 babies from South Korea were adopted; an average of 24 babies left the country each day. Even today, stigma persists around single mothers and children born out of wedlock. If you fall pregnant in South Korea and the father wants nothing to do with you, life can be extremely difficult. Many choose to give up their child, because they know that a single mother could be frozen out by family and friends.
Having children in South Korea is also extremely expensive. There’s a saying that – if you have more than one – you’re either rich or stupid. A single mother with a child faces the grave danger of being financially ruined.
I came to Norway in 1994, and I’ve often felt different. This in turn created an urge to understand my Korean heritage. I have at times experienced identity crises and asked myself who I am. I’ve spent a lot of time being angry, and blaming my biological mother. But in recent years, I’ve turned the feeling of dissociation into a search for resolve – travelling South Korea to better understand how life might have been for my biological mother. I’ve always dreamt of our first meeting, and I don’t know if I’ll ever have the opportunity. I believe she’s the only one who can answer for my lost memories of a life to which I’m involuntarily attached.
Swedish Susanne Fagerlund (b. 1969) completed her MFA at Valand Academy in 2021, but nevertheless brings a lot of artistic experience with her. Fagerlund is selected for Futures 2023 on the basis of her unique artistic expression as well as her both sculptural and interdisciplinary work with the photographic medium, which i.a. uses natural history research, artificial intelligence and glitch feminism as a prism for her work. With The Doppelgänger Series – Mourning for what is being lost, Fagerlund tackles our relationship and belonging to nature. She has an intriguing utopian approach to AI as a tool to create a new visual archive, a ‘digital ecosystem’ of past and speculative future images of plants and species. An integration of AI which is interesting to discuss and unfold in the context of FUTURES.
The Danish photo-based artist Sofie Flinth (b.1996), educated at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, has been selected on the basis of her portraits, which place themselves in the tension between staging and realism. In the project A Million Dollar View, Sofie Flinth explores the vanity of an elderly woman and the perception she has of herself. Flinth's portraits are completely devoid of the sensitivity that is often seen in documentary portraits, but acquire an almost advertising-like aesthetic through her work with themes such as nostalgia and vanity. Her photographic expression can be described as consequent, radical and relevant, and it also emphasizes the humor that her work contains. Sofie Flinth is an exciting example of a Danish artist who is exploring and expanding what portrait photography can and should be.
Danish photojournalist Mikkel Hørlyck (b. 1990) is a classic documentary photographer who works with social issues. In the long term project Jørgen, a Mystery, his intimate and personal story becomes universal and relevant through the drug addict Jørgen's fight for life, his love for his fellow men and his continuing dreams. All told sublimely through recognizable everyday situations, which can only be portrayed by a photographer who really takes an interest in his protagonist and decides to spend a long time on his photography. Mikkel Hørlyck's photography has an exceptionally distinct expression, which invites the viewers into the story and inevitably engages them. An expression that deserves greater international response with Futures. Hørlyck uses his talent to put global issues, social injustice on the agenda. From intimate projects like Jørgen or the Moldovan orphan children in The Neglected to the most recent project The Mercilessness Of The Sea which is part of his long term work on refugees.
Italian visual artist Giulia Mangione (b.1987) is based in Oslo and has resided in the Nordics for several years. With a MA at Bergen Arts Academy and studies in Advanced Visual Storytelling at the School of Media and Journalism in Aarhus, she has a well founded, broad and still curious approach to photography. She adds her feminine touch to the usually masculine genre of photographic road trip. In her project The Fall she manages to portray the prepper culture in a way that is both documentary and surreal at the same time. Each photograph stands as an individual work, and in the context it becomes an exciting, and complete visual style.
Norwegian Jonas Yang Tislevoll (b. 1993) educated from Bilder Nordic School of Photography in 2021 has presented a personal project with a highly relevant subject matter by “Take care of yourself son, your mom loves you”. Dealing with matters such as identity, belonging and women’s rights and adoption in South Korea he is contributing to an important and underlit agenda. His work dares to give space to few but meaningful details, leaving the audience with an atmosphere of an undefined static tension. An atmosphere which is underlined but the sometimes radical cropping The project presents a strong complementary interaction between the long texts and the images which is a strength and a potential Tislevoll could challenge on an international scale through FUTURES’.