Säröjä museossa

Translated title of the contribution: Cracks in the museum

Henrika Ylirisku, Anni Granroth

Research output: Artistic and non-textual formPerformanceSolo art productionpeer-review

Abstract

Cracks in the Museum is an artistic intervention and an experimental performance that borrows its form from a traditional guided museum tour. It critically explores prevailing assumptions about the relationships between humans and more-than-human nature. The performance aims to bring forward complex questions concerning interspecies relations. By defamiliarizing romanticized and anthropocentric conceptions of nature, it opens up space to examine the uncomfortable dimensions of multispecies coexistence, ethically challenging negotiations, and power dynamics.

Cracks in the Museum draws inspiration from Nicole Seymour’s (2018) concept of “bad environmentalism”, making use of affects and sensibilities often considered inappropriate—such as contradiction, awkwardness, irreverence, and playfulness—to challenge and expand mainstream nature and environmental discourses. The performance leads participants to the spaces of the Nature of the World exhibition, where conventional guided tour narratives and affective atmosphers are transformed in absurd and unexpected ways.

The performance is co-created by exhibition designer Anni Granroth from the Finnish Museum of Natural History and Henrika Ylirisku, university lecturer in art education at Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture. Granroth and Ylirisku, who met through the research project Children of the Anthropocene (funded by the Kone Foundation, 2022–2025), and began developing new approaches to environmental art education and museum pedagogy based on their shared interests.

Cracks in the Museum is aimed at adult audiences and has been performed several times for invited groups at the Finnish Museum of Natural History during spring 2025. The performance is written and performed by Granroth and Ylirisku themselves.

The information on artistic outputs in the Aalto Research Portal follows the reporting guidelines of Finland’s Ministry of Education and Culture. Therefore, each contribution requiring independent artistic activity is reported separately. For full details of the work and its contributors, please refer to information provided by the publisher.
Translated title of the contributionCracks in the museum
Original languageFinnish
Place of PublicationHelsinki, Finland
PublisherFinnish Museum of Natural History
Publication statusPublished - 5 Feb 2025
MoE publication typeF1 Published independent work of art or performance

Field of art

  • Performance

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Cracks in the museum'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this