hidden europe 33

Girls on the bridge

by hidden europe

Summary

A line of red and green Russian border-posts skirt the Norwegian Parliament building in Oslo. Politicians turn and look, as do casual passers-by. It is a quiet reminder that Norway really does share a common land border with Russia.

Pikene på Broen (Girls on the Bridge) is the name of a famous painting by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. But it is also the name of a cultural collective operating across the Norwegian- Russian frontier on the Barents Sea coast. Run by six women, three Russian and three Norwegian, Pikene på Broen has for some years been creatively highlighting the benefits of cooperation across Europe’s most northerly land border. Norway’s common border with Russia is a shade less than two hundred kilometres long, and has just one official crossing point at Boris Gleb.

For many Norwegians, their country’s far north (and in particular the frontier region with Russia) is another world. It is a 2500 km drive from Oslo to Kirkenes. So no surprise that folk in Oslo judge Kirkenes to be on the Norwegian periphery. Pikene på Broen turn that idea on its head and recast Kirkenes as being in the very centre of things.

Related blog post

Caught on film - travels through time and space in Łódź

Paul Scraton explores how cities reinvent themselves, taking inspiration from Łódź in Poland where a cutting-edge film industry has documented the city's transition from an industrial to a post-industrial era. Across Europe, media spaces are filling the urban wastelands left when the mills and mines close.

Related blog post

Finding homeplace: travelling with Seamus Heaney

Triggered by a visit to the Seamus Heaney HomePlace - an exhibition dedictated to the poet in Bellaghy in Ireland's County Derry - Paul Scraton ponders the meaning of place in the context of 'home'. Do we not take with us a keen appreciation of our personal home places on our lifelong journey?