Showing posts with label helsinki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label helsinki. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 October 2021

1989 Oslo

12.5.89

Oslo – why Oslo?  I have been here before for a press trip – to Norsk Data – since plunged into the red, as predicted – probably because it took irrelevant journos like me on junkets.  My vision of the city was a fleeting one.  But pleasant.  Going north to colder climes and dour people was attractive.  I needed to get away for various reasons.  As soon as I arrived at the airport, it felt right.

Oslo is so neat and civilised.  There are fountains everywhere, attractive blonde women, long broad streets, a lack of tall buildings.  Everything is on a human scale.  Vastly exciting, it is not: the what's on guide is embarrassing in its paucity of offerings.  I arrived at 11am, and went straight to my hotel – the Savoy (sic) on Universitetsgata.  Then a wander down to the tourist office to pick up maps and info.

I am now in the café of the Grand Hotel, eating reindeer liver pate – very strong.  The price of food is terrifying here.  Across from me is the Stortinget, a Romanesque fantasy which reminds me of the Victoria & Albert MuseumKarl Johans Gate reminds me of Helsinki.  Beautiful weather – hot sun, cool air.  Good news: no  smoking in public places; bad news: cyclists on the pavements.

In the Slottet grounds: two guardsmen in navy blue, with green epaulettes and feathered helmets, walk with a strange formal loping, left hand on their belt at the front, right hand swinging.  Earlier, I saw a procession with brass band – for the changing of the guard?  The palace is a rather modest affair, a miniature Buckingham Palace, two guards on duty, talking to passers-by.  The creamy, yellow colour seems quite common here: most of the older buildings seem eighteenth, nineteenth century.  They look like those in Leningrad.

After lunch, to the Nasjonalmuseet.  A few good old masters – especially Delacroix, interesting Norwegians – the stunning scenery makes "landskips" a doddle – and the cream of the Munch.  Strange pix for such an urbane-looking young man in his self-portrait.  "The Sick Girl" is slashed by deep lines – a battle of a surface.  "The Scream" is thin and almost a sketch.  The door to the Nasjonalmuseet very heavy – as have been several others – I almost gave up.  As in England, young mothers with kids everywhere.  

9.45pm – out into the cold rain – and a surprise: it's light.  I had forgotten this consequence of northward travel.  Otherwise an evening watching French, Norwegian and Swedish TV – plus Sky and Super Channel – the last two dire.

13.5.89

A grey morning, but clearing.  Out to the Munch Museet.  The Oslo underground is new and ultra-clean.  A wonderful smell.  And expensive.  Out to the suburbs, full of neat blocks of flats.  The museum is a low squarish building, easy to miss.  Rather fewer pix inside than I expected.  But big rooms full of wild garish colours.  I was pleased that most were familiar.  Interesting that those in the Nasjonalmuseet are often duplicated here – "Skrik", "Pubertet", "The Sick Girl".  New were the etchings.  Best of these were eight of "The 
Sick Girl" in close up – obsessional reworkings, all the more effective for the cumulative impact of the eight versions.  A very personal vision, but once again, I am glad I am not a painter.

Back on the T-banen, then to the harbour to take a boat out to Bygdøy.  Glorious weather now, scudding clouds, stiff breeze.  It is the first time I have looked out into the fjord.  Low islands across the sparkling water.  In the harbour a gleaming tall ship, three or four masts.  A proud beauty.  As we pull out, I see the castle which I must visit.  Looks unimpressive compared to Brit stuff.  Nice modern architecture along the harbour – why can't the Docklands get this?  Mooring on Bygdøy, then I walk to the Folkemuseum.  Very plush here: BMWs in quiet roads outside immaculate weatherboard houses, white in the sun.

I am sitting in the famous Stave Church – thirteenth century, and one of the most remarkable buildings I have ever seen.  Unlike most, it feels authentically old.  Outside is like some hazy northern pagoda. Both the church and the other buildings have a strange and wonderful property: their spaces seem particularly real.  That is, the space is won and constructed.  Modern buildings are typically divorced entirely from the outside space: there is no relation between in and out.  Here the two communicate, perhaps because the imperfections of the buildings never let you forget the act of construction.  The assemblage of these old empty buildings is touching.  As is the old ghost town which has been constructed.

It is starting to rain, so in to the Folkemuseum proper.  [Parenthetically, in the Munch Museet, three glorious portraits: Ibsen, Strindberg and Nietzsche.  It is strange how each seems defined by their facial hair.]  I write this in the old assembly room, a northern, scaled-down version of Palladio's Teatro Olimpico.   The museum is deserted.  I am left only with the smell of old wood and leather, and the still gazes from beneath wigs and perukes.  This place is thick with time.  To the building opposite.  A crazy exhibit of log chains.  Glorious smell of pine.

To the Viking Ship Museum.  Aptly enough, this is in the form of a church-like cross, three ships in three arms.  And what ships.  Black monsters, superbly preserved.  Very shallow draught, and intricately ornamented on the prow and stern.  And the carriages and sleds.  It is hard to connect these fearsome Viking images with the civilised people here today.  A nation which changed the face of England, France, Sicily, Russia and elsewhere.

Back on the boat to a sunny late Saturday afternoon in Oslo.  Most of the shops were shut by 3 o'clock.  I am now sitting down from the Stortinget, in an open air café – exorbitant but worth it.  The rows of elms are a bright, young green; the horse chestnut is a mass of leaves.  Behind the latter, more fountains susurrate.  Everywhere there are pretty, attractive blonds.  Blue skies.  "Selig", as a poet once said.

14.5.89

Glorious weather: strong sun, refreshing breeze.  Out to Frognerparken to see the Vigeland sculptures.  Those on the bridge as less impressive than those around the column.  The latter are more varied and inventive, and gain from their grouped setting.  The rock is beautiful: it looks so sensuous.  The carving is remarkable for its consistency.  The column is artful: lower down the basic lines are flat; then a diagonal enters – a left corkscrew into the sky.  At the top, verticals.  But I can't help feeling more tapering would have helped.  Aren't women's buttocks wonderful?  From the column, you get a splendid view down the alley to the road.  Hordes of tourists disembark like locusts.  Alongside the simple strength of the granite figures, they look mean and tawdry.

The main fountain is impressive – even in this city of fountains.  The bronze figures surrounding it are curious: they stand or crouch beneath trees; the trees look like alien flora from a Dan Dare comic strip.  

Last night, walking home from dinner at Mona Rosa's, I passed a young woman sobbing violently as she sat in a doorway.  What could I do?  You can't comfort in a foreign tongue.  I walked on, but felt sick at heart.

I am sitting in the chapel of the Akershus Fortress.  An organist – typically attired in suit and organist glasses – has just entered and started playing a strongly modal piece on some softer stops.  Outside the sun breaks through white and dark clouds, sending blurred images of the windows onto the blue carpet in front of me.  This is a real Sunday.  The sound and the occasional fluffs remind me of the short time I learnt the organ.  I was still at secondary school, but I remember driving to a church for practice.  I had to knock someone up for the key.  I remember vividly the smell when the door opened, the fat man wiping a hand over his greasy mouth, chewing still.  I had disturbed his dinner.  The air was think with lower-class living; children squealed distantly.  Once, upon obtaining the key, I went into the church to find a corpse laid out in its coffin.  It was cold and the darkness seemed thick around the light on the organ.  But it all seemed appropriate too.

Old glass in the church windows.  Seven o'clock and still as warm as an English summer's afternoon – the sun as high.  After the concert – before an audience of 12 – I have spent most of the afternoon near Stortinget, sitting in the sun, drinking coffee, watching the world – and young ladies – go by.  Unfortunately these erstwhile Vikings are smokers.

Dinner: devastating avocado, prawns, roe and cream; then reindeer medallions followed by summer fruits in champagne.  This lack of night is so disconcerting.  I am sitting on the wharf side opposite Akershus Slott (Akers is Oslo's river), which is eerily illuminated in the gloaming by sodium glare.  There is a very impressive waterside development here – far better than Docklands.  One warehouse has been converted into shops and boîtes – very lively.  But who are all these boys and girls in red/blue boiler suits?  And what are they selling?  To my left, the Rådhuset blocks stand out like blocks of patterned chocolate.  Half moon tonight.  The smell of sawdust in the air; new buildings behind.

15.5.89

Beautiful morning again.  A walk round the deserted city – a holiday today.  Then to the cathedral, the bells ringing clangorously with wonderful software discords of major seconds.  Inside, and I am immediately back in Helsinki cathedral – a memory long lost.  A Greek cross with a low crossing painted with a wild pointillist frieze.  Gilt everywhere.  I preferred Helsinki.

To the Rådhuset, which really is a beautiful building.  The dark brickwork conceals a wealth of detail – diagonally set bricks, rose circles.  It is, obviously, a very vertical building, emphasised by the tall vertical slots above the regularly placed windows.  Also, the squat central building throws the two flanking towers into prominence.  The astrological clock is a superb stroke: like an intricate jewel on a great flowing robe, it draws the eye in.

There are many races here: orientals, blacks, Arabs, other Europeans.  It will be interesting to see if the melting pot melts.

Sunday, 5 April 2020

1996 Helsinki, Tallinn

3.12.96 Helsinki

Nice airport – shame about the wait for luggage. Up early, 3.30am to Linate, touchdown in Stockholm, to here.  The land of the mobile telephone and the trilingual society – Finnish, Swedish and English.  The women blonde-ish, the men mousey – but often tall and thin, very Lutheran-looking.  I seem to have a problem with Finno-Ugric peoples: as in Turkey, they have lost my luggage… (which is not fatal, since I have everything important in the black bag, including basic clothes…)  Some snow on the ground, grey day.  There are trams – a civilised place. Lots of outcrops of rocks and green – nature is close.  Lots of shops for mobile phones, as if the whole Finnish economy is kept going artificially.

Her waters broke about the time I set foot in Finland… Looks dodgy…  The Man will try to call back Thursday (anyone know any good saints to pray to?)  I go out in the 4 o'clock gloom.  His house is ten minutes from hotel – very near the centre of the city.  Interesting street full of restaurants.  I think that we just passed each other – him with suitcase and father (?) on their way to the hospital…

Typical gaunt nineteenth-century Nordic – a bit like a college quad.  Simple black-framed windows.  Even has bikes in the stair wells.  Tram line passes outside the window (#6 tram).  At the end of the road, "Seaside Hotel" – seems unlikely, but true: Helsinki is surrounded by water [and everyone stands around with a mobile phone to their head].  He lives over a ladies' hairdresser, two empty corner shops, household appliances.  Nice brass nameplate on his door – looking just like college digs.  

To the Cafe Aalto in the Akademiska Bokhandeln.  Well, what a day.  Not content with spiriting away my luggage, the gods (Finnish) also feed me poisonous  food – fried meat/potatoes – so I'll probably have food poisoning too…  One thing though: Linus Torvalds lives in Kalevagatan – Kaleva; Kalevala = Kaleva land.  The centre of Helsinki very attractive. - and very Xmassy.   But one thing that is strange: there are no public clocks.  And so now it feels like 9pm (I think it's about 5.15pm), so dark is it.

4.12.96 Helsinki

The tourist office has never heard of Linus Torvalds.

People stop at pedestrian crossings until green – even if the road is empty.  Finland one of the most connected countries – Net Wizards.  Need mobile phones to keep ears warm from the wind.  Spareness in architecture – be it Lutheran cathedral, or Alvar Aalto's modernism – plain lines.  (Kalevala is old, primitive.)

Saw Hannu Savolainen this morning (the smorning).  Mumbling somewhat, but the tape seems to have caught it.  Increasingly I get the feeling that Linux hackers prefer Usenet/email rather than meeting physically.  (Finns hack code because it's so dark and there's nothing else to do?)

The most famous living Finn? (Well, you name one…)

To Zetor's.  Full of tractors and a witty menu.  Surprisingly nice ambience – all little wood enclaves.  My interview with Lars Wirzenius was good – he was there before even Linux was – good angles on the future – and the first period over, Linux hack finished.  The waitresses typical Finn pixies, short, dumpy, blonde hair short, and the obligatory wire-frame glasses.

Linux is interesting as a new kind of life-form.  It is designed to evolve, picking up enhancements.  "First software organism".  Copyleft ensures that the source code – the DNA – is always present.  True it needs a complex environment – computers, the Internet, human minds – but then animal life's preconditions are extreme (try changing key physical constants like G (gravity) or e, the charge on an electron – no life.  This is Linus' gift to the world: setting up Linux as an extensible system that is independent of him.  Like Berners-Lee – created right mix of design to be self-supporting.  Interesting that both are Europeans, creating open extensible systems.

Main course (salmon pie) OK – but fried (as is so much here: life's tough if you are off fats).  But the star was the bread: black, sweet/sour and delicious (also same bread at breakfast [which was quite acceptable, more salmon than you could shake a stick at, pickled herring]).  Lunch at Stockmann's – nice airy restaurant on the sixth floor, reasonable salad.  By night (that is, most of the time), Stockmann is lit like the proverbial – and damn fine it looks too…

5.12.96 Helsinki

Still waiting for that interrupt…

Slept ten hours last night – must be the lack of light here.  Grey, wettish morning.  Along to the cathedral.  As I recall: so stark – barely a picture or statue to break its neo-classical purity.  Box pews, all neatly numbered by row.  Only ornament a fine organ and circular pulpit.  Four chandeliers, ornate and gilded – the rest just pure semi-circles and a few Ionic columns (the simplest apart from basic Doric).  This is the heart of old Helsinki.  Senate Square – looks very like St. Petersburg (same architect).  Cathedral started in 1830, designed by Carl Ludwig Engel.  Grey-pink granite cobbles (rectangular, 8" by 3"), cut through by tram lines.  Pale yellow wash reminds you of St. Petersburg.  

In the Ateneum (still no news), eating too much food and drinking (again) some of the worst coffee in Europe (kahvi).  The huge building site opposite the parliament (and near my hotel) turns out to be the Museum of Contemporary Art, being finished December 1997.  Designed by Steven Holl, takes form of chiasma – winning design, simplicity and spareness again.  Open to the public 1998, "walls and ceiling are white plaster, with the aim of creating tranquillity and simplicity".  Has small waterfall running through building.  [Online info system.]  Just my luck: only 3 Akselli here (all depicting Kullervo); the others on tour in Oslo (?).

Back in hotel: strange to find Torvalds, Linus, in the phone book – like finding…?  Tore it out – so if you find this page missing in a Helsinki hotel, you know who did it. Wandering around for an hour, looking for a restaurant – so bloody expensive.  End up in Kosmos, Kalevagatan (of course).  Bit smoky, and they showed me to a lousy table, but very full and good buzz.

Although frustrating in many ways, at least today I bought some items: three Finnish CDs and two books on Akseli Gallen-Kallela (I also had to break open my case, since the lock has gone on it – dancing around in the nude this morning, trying to get clean clothes…)  I read one Gallen book – rather depressing, as these things often are.  The gradual waning and decay.  Food not bad: smoked eel and celery soup, pike perch (poached) plus blueberries – and the odd Finlandia vodka to wash it all down.

6.12.96 Helsinki

Well, this is droll. After bogging over to the West Terminal at 6.45am to go to Tallinn, what do I find but both boats are full: it appears that Finns pop over to Tallinn as Brits do to Calais – everyone here carrying empty suitcases.  I wonder what they buy.  I'm on the waiting list, but they don't seem very hopeful.  Torvalds: rings at 18.30 yesterday to tell that his wife has podded – a couple of hours earlier wouldn't have hurt, eh?  Ah, perhaps I know why: today is Independence Day.  So probably everyone has the day off.  Damn.  And all the museums are shut.  What a bummer.  

Well, here I am, on board… waiting around for returns is unusually effective.  Mind you, I am deeply ambivalent about doing this.  In the hotel (Ramada Presidentti), I was very reluctant to go out.  Must be old age.  Once in the bus I felt happier: clearly there is a kind of travel inertia and travel momentum.  Now on the boat, I wonder.  Packed to the gunwales, a Russian ship, you can't move for people.  Moreover, the safety instructions are few and far between.  I am now sitting very near the lifeboats (inside – but if necessary, I'll stay outside too).  Travelling out in the darkness (at 8 am) is also unsettling.  At least the sea seems reasonably calm, and no mist obvious.  Perhaps the darkness helps explain why people here are drinking beer (for breakfast?).  Clearly these are just binges – another factor that does not engender confidence (though perhaps the competition will be less…).

[Another cheering aspect: passing one of the cabins used by the crew, I saw a photocopy of an article: "The last voyage of the Estonia: A new theory for its sinking" – or something.]

Sitting in bus 92 – included in the price, which is civilised.  Changed pounds into Kroon – to add to my collection.  A cold grey day – but hey, I'm in Estonia.  Very nice terminal this side – looks just like an airport.  Helpful info desk.

What can one say, but wow?  In the Toomkirik on the hill.  Here is like Vilnius, Prague, only more so: beautiful eighteenth-century houses and palaces, falling to pieces (but some being restored: not long before it becomes prettified – and saved, of course).  Organ music (live – with wrong notes) playing in this tranquil place.  Interesting to see signs in Russian, and to hear it spoken.  All these places in the world, waiting for me to visit them…  Fine box pews here too, painted lime-green, and green-blue.  The basic wall colour white, with coats of arms (guilds).  At the back of the church, huge triple deck radiators, clanking away.  Monuments in German.  Also the coats of arms – maybe not guilds?  The tomb of Samuel Greig – Scot/Russian.  

To the Sub Marte restaurant – fairly smart, in a cellar. At Rüütli, 4.  Warm (especially with a vodka). Taking herring (and apple boiled in wine) and roe deer.  I have the place to myself, despite the hordes on the boat – they obviously have other priorities – as is evidenced by the fact they stayed on bus 92 after it went past the old town.  This restaurant reminds of a similar cellar in Prague – but this has rather more pretensions – nice linen, cutlery, hyper-clean toilets (not to be taken for granted according to Lonely Planet….)  Pity about the music – New York 1950s – nice, but inappropriate.

One thing, in the heart of this crumbling history, you hear the seagull's cry – and remember this is a sea-port.  It's a question of taking the right approach.  Vilnius/Lithuania needs to be reached through its history – Poland and Byelorussia.  Estonia, by contrast, is linked to Finland rather than the rest of the Indo-European world, and should be approached by sea from Helsinki.  So good to see such a small language group revelling in their own.

3.30pm – raining slightly now, but that's all right. As dusk descends, the amber lights in the shops look all the warmer.  Now in a cafe bar just off the main square with the back of the town hall facing me – drinking the splendidly-named glögi – Glühwein – just what you need on a day like this.  Also good for a slightly sore throat I seem to be developing…  This place really is magic.  One thing: the smell of woodsmoke makes me think of India, inevitably, but jarringly.  Mind you, there's a church here that's dedicated to St Nicholas of Bari – nice contrast with a few thousand kilometres betwixt the two.

On board (at 5pm, better early than late, and I've reserved a place in the buffet).  Everyone showing their acquisitions to admiring friends.  In fact Tallinn did have a glow of prosperity – due to these tourists – that Vilnius lacked.  More flash cars – and even mobile phones.  I feel grateful (as ever) to have seen it before it becomes just another attractive European capital.  Surely now is the best time: after the great Soviet sleep has been shrugged off, but before capitalism has its fangs completely in the living flesh.

I sit rather close to the prow in the dining room (I prefer being near the exits, myself), feeling rather too full after eating an extremely fine buffet (or two courses of it at least).  A young lady pianist serenades us.  Ahead of us – a long way, I hope – there are lights of other liners/tankers.  I think of Ιθάκη, and those unbelievable evenings, so far away – in distance, indeed, though not really time (almost exactly six months).

7.12.96 Helsinki

On the way to Linus.

His street an interesting mix: nineteen-century houses, modern blocks, a couple of Chinese restaurants, a Japanese restaurant, Pub Angleterre (sic), a few galleries, cafes, a computer shop "Data Club" (with a row of books on Linux in the window).  Also the ubiquitous Mr Pickwick Pub.  A tattooist, a supermarket, hair salon, and corner shop.  Tram #6 to the Seaside Hotel, the Western Terminal for going to Tallinn.  His building an indescribable orangey-red. Four storeys.  

I feel that the three-odd hours were not very successful.  Too rushed, him pre-occupied, me forgetting to ask things.  This was not as I'd imagined things – but then one has to be "pragmatic" (like Linus).  Along to Konstan Möljä (ironically about 100 metres from L.T.), Hietalahdenkatu 14, for some old Karelian culture.  Wonderful cheese soup, with avocado spread on the rich brown bread, plus vodka to drown my soul (reminds me that L. wants to go to Ireland – "to drink Guinness" there). 

One of the problems – perhaps – is that L.T. is rather focussed.  I rarely managed to strike a spark from him.  And he failed to respond to any gambit.  Place is done out with lots of wood, blocks and tackle, and those elegiac black and white photos from 100 years ago showing ports and ships and long-dead sailors.  Still, all-in-all, things have been quite successful here.  Given the big bummer of Mrs T. sprogging early, I can't complain (but I do).  Daftly, perversely, the thing that makes me happiest from this trip is not even Tallinn (lovely though it was), but the fact that I can understand RTL almost to the point of second-guessing the deeply predictable dialogues.

8.12.96 Helsinki

A very bad night.  Out now by the parliament building – pink granite with Egyptian pillars and heads of Sakhmet (!).  Kiasma stands opposite, a statute of Mannerheim on his horse that travelled 2000 miles.  To Finlandia – concert halls.  Very severe – manages to make Italian marble look as friendly as concrete.  No ornament – just hard lines.  In my beginning is my end and all that: back to the Academic Bookshop for lunch – open and not too busy.  

Last night, my mind was just so full of Linux – and conscious that as ever things had not gone as I'd hoped.  Looking through my questions this morning, I see that relatively few are unanswered, and yet I feel that something essential is missing.  Mr T. for example: I cannot hope to grasp him in three hours.  And the fact that he was preoccupied with his baby – his other baby – meant that persisting was useless.  I was tempted to try to see him today, but will instead use email (appropriate in some ways).  So I leave here dissatisfied, a terrible contrast to the optimism I brought here.

In the airport.  Dead time, waiting.  L.T. quite atypical: light brown hair, thin face, blue (?) eyes – obviously Swedish stock.  Many Finns have oriental features, square-ish heads, blonde hair.  L.T.'s impish grin born perhaps of someone who knows that he knows more than you do in the one area that matters to him: hacking.  Not so much arrogant as supremely self-confident in this sphere.

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