• About
    • Ethics policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ownership, funding and corrections
    • Complaints procedure
    • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
Brighton and Hove News
21 May, 2026
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Brighton and Hove News
No Result
View All Result
Home News

REVIEW – TAKKUUK

The Box@The Old Market, Hove, 19th May 2026

by Louise Acford
Thursday 21 May, 2026 at 1:25PM
A A
0


TAKKUUK, an Inuktitut word meaning ‘look’, is a powerful installation exploring Indigenous life and culture in the Arctic. Shown on four screens simultaneously, this 360-degree experience combines images, music and interviews from the Tundra.

It is a collaboration between visual artist Zak Norman and filmmaker Charlie Miller, Northern Irish musicians BICEP, and Indigenous musicians who are also interviewed in the film, including Greenlandic rapper TARAK, Inuktitut throat-singers SILLA, and Katarina Barruk.

The audience is seated in the centre of the room on beanbags, although regular chairs line the edges for those whose beanbag days are no more.
It takes a moment to settle, but the audience is soon drawn into this immersive installation, which mixes reflective interviews with expansive sequences where the senses are overtaken by striking imagery and a carefully constructed soundtrack.

Each track is produced by electronic act BICEP and was recorded at Reykjavik’s Airwaves Festival back in November 2023. The haunting sounds of the Indigenous musicians contrasts with BICEP’s rave-influenced beats, bleeps and stabs. Two very different cultures from very different backgrounds collide to create something hypnotic, beautiful and, above-all, makes you want to dance.

The four-screen format of The Box never feels gimmicky and is used with care. At times the room is flooded with shifting, other-worldly imagery; at others, it is more playful, as when a herd of reindeer circles the viewer, trapping us in their journey.

Visually, the filmmakers avoid familiar Arctic clichés. There are no polar bears or Arctic foxes in sight, instead focusing on abstracted imagery drawn from the region. We are not simply immersed in surface-level depictions of snow and ice, but move into the deeper, more layered textures of the landscape. The images drift across the screens like continually falling water.
The result is hypnotic and absorbing, punctuated by thoughtful and moving interview segments.

Each of the interviews are with young Indigenous musicians from Sami, Inuit and Inuktitut backgrounds. They are united not only by music but by a commitment to honouring their past and sustaining their cultures. Many have learned languages that were close to extinction and speak about passing them on to future generations.

They may be musicians and performers as-such, but there is nothing performative about this commitment. The embrace of the past and reclamation of something stolen feels like an act of resistance — an insistence on survival in the face of forces that attempted cultural erasure.

One interviewee speaks of an imaginary red thread held by each generation, describing how it was once dropped and is now being picked up again. Red and purple recur throughout the installation, captured through infrared imagery that renders the landscape — often framed as pristine and untouched — as bruised and bloodied. The red thread, the environmental damage, and the visual language of the work seep into one another across the screens.

The interviews are compelling, offering insight into lives rarely given space in this format. At times, they feel constrained by the structure of the installation, particularly when SILLA speaks about the shame carried by a culture that was nearly eradicated by forces that deemed it “evil”.

The Inuktitut duo also discuss pressures placed on the land through external interventions, including wind farms that have disrupted reindeer grazing routes. This ongoing misunderstanding of the relationship between culture and land is something I would have liked to hear explored further, though it remains a minor limitation in an otherwise thoughtful work.

The film begins with an explanation of tiny pockets of air trapped within layers of ice thousands of years old. These ancient gases hold information about the planet’s past and, potentially, its future survival.

The caretakers of this knowledge — Indigenous people who have lived in these environments for generations — have, like the ice itself, been worn down by external forces over time. Each layer of ice is in danger of disappearing, taking its secrets with it. A parallel emerges between the ice sheets and the generations of people who have lived there, gathering knowledge that may prove essential to our understanding of the world.

If these cultures are allowed to disappear, they risk taking that knowledge with them. TAKKUUK leaves us with the sense that what is at stake is not only cultural survival, but a body of understanding rooted in place, language and memory — knowledge we may yet discover we cannot afford to lose.

TAKKUUK is part of Of Land, Sea and Sky in partnership with The Old Market and runs until May 23rd.

Support quality, independent, local journalism that matters. Donate here.
ShareTweetShareSendSendShare

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most read

Father pays tribute to daughters who drowned off Brighton beach

Smoke control area to cover almost all of Brighton and Hove

First train with Great British Railways livery unveiled in Brighton

School plans 10ft fence around playing field

Tenant faces arson charge after fire damages council flat

Sussex Police officer denies child sex offences and perverting justice

REVIEW – TAKKUUK

Facelift planned for shop which has been empty for five years

Roadworks crew left tar and rubble piled up against old flint wall

1,500 homes without water

Newsletter

Arts and Culture

  • All
  • Music
  • Theatre
  • Food and Drink
The Great Escape Festival and beyond (Part 1: 25 reviews)

The Great Escape Festival and beyond (Part 1: 25 reviews)

21 May 2026
Bound By The Wind, Rotunda Bubble, May 24-25th 2026

Bound By The Wind Brings The Story of Mulan

21 May 2026
Godz, Head First Acrobats, Brighton Fringe, May 2026

Godz Of Brighton Fringe

21 May 2026
Darling, Brighton Fringe, May 20th 2026

Review: Darling

21 May 2026
Load More

Sport

  • All
  • Brighton and Hove Albion
  • Cricket
Bruce on the Boundary – Robinson ready to take the next step

Rain gods smile as Sussex draw with Somerset at Taunton

by Richard Latham - ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay
18 May 2026
0

Somerset 526-8 dec (128.4 overs) Sussex 253 (71.1 overs) and 113-7 (57.4 overs) Somerset (15 points) drew with Sussex (10...

Bruce on the Boundary – Robinson ready to take the next step

Sussex hang on as Somerset match heads for a draw

by Richard Latham - ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay
17 May 2026
0

Somerset 526-8 dec (128.4 overs) Sussex 236-8 (69.1 overs) Sussex (1 point) trail Somerset (6 points) by 290 runs with...

Brighton and Hove Albion thwarted by last-gasp goal at Leeds

Brighton and Hove Albion thwarted by last-gasp goal at Leeds

by Mark Tiro
17 May 2026
0

Leeds United 1 Brighton and Hove Albion 0 Dominic Calvert-Lewin struck a stoppage-time winner as Leeds dealt Brighton’s hopes of...

One change as Brighton and Hove Albion face Leeds United

One change as Brighton and Hove Albion face Leeds United

by Frank le Duc
17 May 2026
0

As Brighton and Hove Albion face Leeds United, Seagulls head coach Fabian Hürzeler has made one change to the side...

Load More
May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    

RSS From Sussex News

  • First train with Great British Railways livery unveiled in Sussex 20 May 2026
  • Man jailed for burglary, theft and fraud 20 May 2026
  • Three months of work to start at railway station 20 May 2026
  • Sussex Police detective inspector denies child sex offences and perverting justice 19 May 2026
  • Child rapist jailed for 13 years 19 May 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
  • About
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy
  • Complaints
  • Ownership, funding and corrections
  • Ethics
  • T&C

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Opinion
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
  • Sport
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Contact

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News