September 2nd, 2007

A picturesque garden city or a gritty ghetto? Both can be claimed about Södra Sofielund, a small neighbourhood in Malmö where high rates of criminality and poverty go side by side with idyllic homes of the intellectual middle class.
Rosenlundsgatan is a nice little street with row houses and small detached houses from the early 1900’s with hollyhocks on the front and gardens on the back. The street is also in the top three of places with lots of car break-ins in the city. One street away you find the home of Malmö’s mayor. Yet another street away is Sevedsplan, an area with low-rise residentials from the mid 1900’s. It’s one of the poorest parts of town, and by Swedish measures a gritty place.
There is a gentrification process going on among the small houses, but it is going surprisingly slowly. Even in the more idyllic parts there is still a big diversity among in the population. Södra Sofielund is one of the most central parts of Malmö where you can get a house with a garden, and the house prices have been going up a lot during the last years. The neighbourhood is located next to Möllevången, a young, hip and vibrant part of town, and lots of the not-so-young-anymore-but-still-claiming-to-be-hip people from Möllevången dream of a small house with a garden at Sofielund. I’m one of them.

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August 12th, 2007

This summer the National Gallery in London has brought the fine art to the public, by lining the streets of West End with reproductions of some of its paintings. The campaign is clearly a comment on street art culture — and of course a way to draw people to the gallery. It also raises interesting questions about the importance of authenticity and context.

June 27th, 2007
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Europe by
Olga Schlyter

Genoa
One of the big joys of travelling in Italy—besides the food, the ice cream and the coffee—is the beautiful signs you see everywhere. Italians know the fine art of signage, and they know the art of preserving old but highly functional signs.

Rapallo
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March 15th, 2007

These photos are from my first, and so far last, trip to Canada. I actually don’t know much about what they are depicting—so I leave the commenting to you. It’s fascinating though how a crappy scanner, black and white film and the way people are dressed make 1995 feel like ancient history.
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February 18th, 2007

A dull and hopelessly grey city. That’s how William Burroughs describes Malmö in a short passage in Naked Lunch. This was in the 1950s. At that time, Malmö was a prosperous industrial city and one of the world’s largest shipyards, Kockums, was the main employer. But that wasn’t quite what Burroughs was looking for. When he wasn’t served any liquor on his arrival in the morning, he took the next boat back to Copenhagen.
When I grew up in the 1980’s, in the neighbouring university town of Lund, the constant joke about Malmö was that the best thing about the city was its boat to Copenhagen. That wasn’t just some silly, intercity rivalry talk. At this time Malmö was in a deeply depressing state of unemployment and crisis. The recession in the 1970s had struck hard, and the pride of the city — the shipyard — was closed. My memories of Malmö in the 1980s resemble Burroughs’ from the 50s (except for the part about being unable to find any liquor).
But since the mid 90s, Malmö has managed to change, and is adapting to the post-industrial society. The focus is now on education and culture, and for the last ten years there’s been a university located in the old shipyard area. Malmö is now actually considered quite hip, a city with lots of immigrants and a cosmopolitan feel. I think William Burroughs might have liked it, and, even if he didn’t, he wouldn’t have to wait for the next boat. There’s a bridge to Copenhagen now, and he could just get in a cab and be there in no time. After all, one thing still hasn’t changed: the liquor is still more plentiful in Denmark.
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January 16th, 2007
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Olga Schlyter

Lodz is Poland’s second largest city. Not being the capital or having the dazzling charm and beauty of for example Krakow, the city isn’t that well known or visited by tourists. Lodz used to be an important centre for textile industry and lots of beautiful, old factory buildings remain in the city. Many of them have an uncertain future, while others are beeing redeveloped. These photos were taken in February 2004.

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November 7th, 2006
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Europe by
Olga Schlyter

Warschauer Strasse, Friedrichshain

Kastanienallee, Prenzlauer Berg
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October 6th, 2006

Novgorod, Russia
A walk in the city. A glance to the side. A glimpse of light.
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September 30th, 2006
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Europe by
Olga Schlyter


Venice is not only canals, and not only tourists. On a small square, the locals enjoy the warming sun on a chilly January day.