Evocative: ”Inspiration east Asia” at the new Röhsska museum. Photo: Hendrik Zeitler 1. Exhibitions. The Röhsska museum, Gothenburg, sweden

After more than two years of renovation and restructuring, is now the Röhsska museum in Gothenburg finally open – in several respects. The entrance has been rebuilt and nytändningen feels in the house. Among other things, invites Fredrik Paulsen in the audience to make the chairs and already the first weekend created a whole bunch. Creative input you can otherwise get by Brynjar Sigurdarson, the Torsten and Wanja Söderberg miljonpristagare. He demonstrates just how open designbegreppet is in the day, including a ring-shaped flute, as several can play at the same time. The very best changes is the ”Inspiration east Asia”, both suggestive as thought provoking permanent exhibition. Read more here.

Hope low tolls: Zain Al Rafeea as Zain and Boluwatife Treasure Bankole as Yonas in ”Capernaum”. Photo: Scanbox 2. Film. ”Capernaum”

Bio

the original title of Nadine Labakis academy award nominee children-of-operation-drama is the ”Capharnaüm” which means chaos on the French. The title also has a bearing in the Bible, a name of a town of tiberias, which was a residence of Jesus in the New testament. An accurate and telling title for a film about a streetsmart 12-year-old who gets enough of their vile parents, runs away from home and suddenly the sole responsibility of a small defenseless cub, in the middle of Beirut’s slums. An extraordinary drama that oscillates between ice-cold rudeness and hot streaks of pleasure – and not so little sentimentality. ”Capernaum” is becoming a place where the small world and the big crash into each other, but where the low gasps on. Read the DN’s review here.

Almost unbearable: ”P3 Documentary” about the murder of SR correspondent Nils Horner. Photo: Staffan Sonning/SR 3. Radio. ”The murder of Nils Horner”

Documentary P3

”Everyone was in total shock. In particular, it becomes quiet. There is nothing to say.” One of Nils Horners colleagues at the Swedish Radio captures so exactly how it must have been the dreadful day, on 11 march 2014, then the SR’s correspondent was shot to death on a street in the Afghan capital of Kabul. For how should to be able to be both grieving and journalist? Before the fifth anniversary of the murder, the reporter has Hannah Engberg has made a icy ”P3 Documentary” about Nils Horners last days of life and about what happened then. It is almost unbearable to listen to, partly because of the charming details that make the Nils Horner was so careful to remove their sidenskjortor do it so bottomless, sad, partly because there is no response to the question of why he was murdered. To listen anyway.

On the fight for the gun laws: ”Parkland” by Dave Cullen. 4. The book of mormon. Dave Cullen: ”Parkland”

Harper

Dave Cullens ‘Columbine’ is the best book that has been written about the earthquake not only deprived of the 15 people of life, but it was a bleak turning point in the vapenvåldets history. Since then, school shootings have become a more common feature in the united states. Often marked by an equally limp as suggestive media reporting about the offenders: the honour, bullied loners. Cullens new book, ”Parkland” is the story of the next turning point in the skolskjutningarnas history. In the afterbirth of the attack in Parkland, Florida, the 2018 organising several of the surviving students in the fight for stricter gun laws. Today, the initiative is a mass movement that got the NRA to shake to its very foundations. Read more here.

A gift to the poesiläsarna: Gunvor Hofmo. Photo: Gyldendal 5. Poetry. Gunvor Hofmo: ”I forget no one”

Norstedts

There is a clear smärtpunkt in the Norwegian poet Gunvor Hofmos authorship. In november 1942, fetched her beloved Ruth Maier by the police and shipped together with over five hundred women and children to the naszistiska the gas chambers. Life is never more like the. In this wonderful selection of Eva Runefelt and Staffan Söderblom, we get the following: how Gunvor Hofmos the poetry of change – both before and after the twenty-two years she sits in a psychiatric hospital in Oslo. Each image, each line, describe so accurately and achingly beautiful a never-transient loneliness. A gift to all Swedish poesiläsare. Read the DN’s review here.

Read about last week’s five favorites