I know how time and thoughts flow in Dals Långed. It was summer 1994 when I travelled to the Swedish woods from Tokyo for the first time.
I couldn’t believe how an arts, crafts and design school existed in the middle of nowhere, but Steneby did and I chose to move there.
It was a time that offered a lot philosophically, or at least it seemingly helped me to understand and sort out the distant world apart from the flood of a large city. Perhaps it was only the romantic idea of a young girl trying to find her own version of Walden, but it worked and my three years there continue to provide me strength.
The French cultural theorist and urbanist Paul Virilio, in his quintessential book Speed and Politics (1977), writes “the human dwelling place is penetrated by channels of rapid communication.” In the 1970s he was arguing about points relevant to today; “time” and “speed” are issues within everything.
This year’s 19 bachelor graduates from Steneby are aware of their quality of time spent during three years of seclusion away from the mainstream, but their minds are firmly rooted to our present time. The works are, among others, a new twist on the concerns and comprehensive research about: sustainable design solutions, connecting fantasy worlds through tactile material experiment, relations between man and nature, 200 hours of craft skill, paraphrases of popular culture and a never ending fascination with geometry and systems.
Maybe it sounds similar to the ideas heard at design schools all over the world today, but what you will see here is a tremendous concentration permeating the students’ thoughts and actions. The time they were able to really focus reveals the precious and unique qualities found at Steneby.
One thing I can promise—the life experience at Steneby will take them far!