Wiberg & Nyberg

Sofia Wiberg and Stina Nyberg have been collaborating since 2014 in the murky waters between urban planning, choreography, critical thinking and embodied practices.

In 2021 and 2022 they organized two symposiums at Hägerstensåsens medborgarhus in Stockholm entitled A Thinking Practice. The symposium is addressing collective learning processes in relation to listening, asymmetrical power relations and not-knowing.

A Thinking Practice is a practice based symposium addressing collective learning processes in relation to listening, asymmetries, filth, not-knowing and desire. We long for a space to think, feel, organize and practice with others. A space where we, despite knowing that we won’t find any simple solutions, engage with each other in an unknown future.

The symposium is initiated from an interest in working collectively, from the perspective of the fields of choreography and urban planning. We believe that in times of urgencies, in moments of doubt, in seconds of fear, we must gather and think. And thinking does not mean big Thought, but a practice which involves every nerve and every relation. A thinking that involves paying attention to that which is already there in order to imagine what could be. We notice each other because we are at stake to each other.

The focus of the symposium is to practically investigate forms of thinking. We believe that all thoughts are thought from somewhere – in relation to a practice and to thoughts previously thought. We therefore see that how we think is crucial for what we think. Through which practices can we attune ourselves to listen for that which we do not already know? What practices of attention help us to be available for others, for the not-understandable, for the opaque? And how can we encourage each other to think, in all its multitude of practices, in order to create collective change?

A thinking practice (medborgarhuset.se)

Presenting at the symposium A Thinking Practice 2021: Eleanor Bauer, Jonna Bornemark, Sebastian Dahlqvist, Lisa Nyberg and Cara Tolmie

Presenting at the symposium A Thinking Practice 2022: Eduardo Abrantes, Juli Apponen, Eleanor Bauer, Áron Birtalan, Åsa Bjerndell, Amy Boulton, Oda Brekke, Xiyao Chen, Sebastian Dahlqvist, Rosa Danenberg, Laressa Dickey, Disorder, Darya Efrat, Anna Enström, Benj Gerdes, Tiril Hasselknippe, Sara Kaaman, Elke Krasny, Carmen Lael Hines, Ying-Tzu Lin, Pedram Nasouri, Chrysa Parkinson, Kibandu Pello-Esso, Sophia Persson, Pontus Pettersson, Tuija Roberntz, Tove Salmgren, Alexis Steeves, Ellen Söderhult, Cara Tolmie, Ana Vujanovic, Gabriel Widing, Andros Zins-Browne, Jenny Övergaard

The symposium was made with support by Riksbankens jubileumsfond, Statens kulturråd and Helge Ax:son Johnsons stiftelse..

An collage of dolphins and shapes with the text Bodies and objects both shape and takes shape in relation to eachother

Artwork Jens Strandberg for Paletten Art Journal (2017)