Scandinavian House
THE SCANDINAVIAN HOUSE HAS NEW ADDRESS
In July 2009 the Scandinavian House moved to a new office which is located in Prague 6: DEJVICKÁ 3, 160 00 PRAGUE 6. The office is 5 minutes far from the metro stations Dejvická and Hradčanská (line A; a map can be found at the bottom of the article).
The office and the library were reopened on 21st September.
Opening hours: Mon 3 - 8 p.m., Thu 1 - 5 p.m.
We are looking forward to meet in our new office!
Exhibition Opening: Icelandic Contrasts
Twenty most successful images from a competition of the same name announced by The Scandinavian House and The Club of Icelandic Fanatics.
Monday 31th May, 18:00, Café Nordica, Zlatnická 10, Prague 1
Entrance: voluntary contributions. Until 30. 9. 2010.
Exhibition of Ilon Wikland's illustrations
The Scandinavian House in cooperation with the Municipal Library of Prague and the Embassy of Estonia and the Embassy of Sweden invites you to the opening of Ilon Wikland's exhibition.
Date: 17th August 2010, 6 pm
Venue: Municipal Library of Prague (Mariánské square 1, Prague 1)
Until 16th September 2010. See the invitation here.
Get two free tickets for H. Hukkelberg's concert
Answer correctly the following question:
Hanne Hukkelberg contributed the song Lucy to the soundtrack of the second film in epic fantasy series. What is the full name of the film, i.e. both the name of the series and the name of the second film?
Send your answers (together with your name and surname) to: info(at)skandinavskydum.cz. Deadline is on Tuesday 14 September 2010 at 12:00. Please write COMPETITION HUKKELBERG as a subject of your email. We will then chose by lot one answer whose author will get two free tickets for Hanne Hukkelberg's concert in the Palác Akropolis.
If you do not get the free tickets, you can come to the concert as well: Thursday 16 September 2010, 7:30pm, Palác Akropolis.
Nordic Days - Festival of Nordic Culture, 4.-15.10.2010
The festival of Nordic culture takes place in Prague in the first half of October 2010. The Scandinavian House in cooperation with many other partners will welcome the Nordic Days festival there. Everybody interested in Nordic culture can enjoy more than ten cultural events - among them: an exhibition of the young Norwegian artist Anders Grønlien, screenings of the Finnish films based on Arto Paasilinna's novels, a lecture on Greenlandic literature, a discussion on translating Nordic literature into Czech and a lecture on travelling in Iceland. The festival will welcome two great Nordic guests - the Danish writer Erling Jepsen (the film Frygtelig lykkelig / Terribly Happy - awarded at the International Film Festival in Karlovy Vary 2008 - is based on his novel) and one of the most famous contemporary Swedish writers Per Olov Enquist. In the middle of September the website www.skandinavskydum.cz will launch competitions for free tickets for parts of the festival (theatre performances) and a more detailed festival programme will be announced.
Film premiere: A Somewhat Gentle Man in the cinema Světozor from 22nd April 2010
Aerofilms and the Scandinavian House present: A Somewhat Gentle Man (En ganske snill mann; direction: Hans Petter Moland, Norway, 2010, Norwegian version / Czech subtitles, 103 min).
In the cinema Světozor (Vodičkova 41, Prague 1) from 22nd April 2010, 7pm.
Ulrik is a somewhat gentle man. He has no special wishes and makes no demands, and also gives little thought to what he does. If he’s given some food and a place to sleep, he will give people what they want in return. Whether this may be a little affection or a killing. Ulrik has killed some people and also crippled several. It’s all part of the job when you’re a gangster. Just like doing time.Now Ulrik is out again, reluctantly… and Jensen is waiting on the outside. He’s a boss with professional pride, and it is important for Jensen that Ulrik kills the snitch that ratted him out. ...
Film screening: The Soviet Story

“The Soviet Story” is a story of an Allied power, which helped the Nazis to fight Jews and which slaughtered its own people on an industrial scale. Assisted by the West, this power triumphed on May 9th, 1945. Its crimes were made taboo, and the complete story of Europe’s most murderous regime has never been told. Until now…
15th June 2010 at 6 pm
Faculty of Arts and Philosophy, Charles University in Prague, room nr. 209, Nám. J. Palacha 2 (Jana Palacha Square 2), Prague 1
Entrance: voluntary contributions.
In English with Czech subtitles
Exhibition Opening: Iida Ojanperä: Fortuna – to be honest, it moves
The exhibition Fortuna – to be honest, it moves is about believing in your dreams and giving happiness a chance.
Nobody wanted to believe what Galileo Galilei said about the world: „To be honest, it moves.“ In everyday life we struggle with our hopes and fears. Our dreams can lose balance or change, but they never fade away. The ultimate fortune is to exist. It is enough.
The exhibition involves digitally collected photo paintings which are printed on canvas.
The paintings are for sale.
31st March, 6pm, Café Nordica, Zlatnická 10, Prague 1.
Until 31st May 2010.
Entrance: voluntary contributions.
Ojanperä´s another exhibition opening in the Czech Republic - 3rd April in Kolín: Anam Cara.
Three film screenings based on Knut Hamsun's books
A two-day set of three film screenings based on Knut Hamsun's books. On the first day, the screening will be started by a lecture on Hamsun's work by Martin Humpál.
Knut Hamsun (1859 - 1952) was a Norwegian writer who was awarded by the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1920. In 2009, it was celebrated the 150th anniversary of the author's birth in Norway.
You will see these films: Hunger, Pan and Hamsun.
In Norwegian, only with English subtitles.
Faculty of Arts and Philosophy, Charles University in Prague, room nr. 209, Nám. J. Palacha 2 (Jana Palacha Square 2), Prague 1
Entrance: voluntary contributions.
First day: TH 27th May, 16:45, lecture by M. Humpál and films: Hunger and Pan
Second day: MO 31st May, 17:00, film: Hamsun
Waltari's Sinuhe in the View of the Finnish Egyptology
What was the life story of real Sinuhe? How did the author describe the world of ancient Egypt? Finnish egyptologist Jaana Toivari-Viitala from the University in Helsinki and the Finnish Academy will answer these and many more questions during her lecture on Waltari's Sinuhe the Egyptian in the View of the Finnish Egyptology.
Sinuhe the Egyptian is the most famous historical novel written by Finnish author Mika Waltari. For the long time it has been a pearl among Finnish classical literature. For many Finns, as well as for many Czechs, Sinuhe was their first contact with ancient Egyptian culture and many readers fell in love with ancient Egypt after reading this book. In Sinuhe the Egyptian Mika Waltari masterly combined fiction and ancient Egyptian sources and created magnificent complex story in which the original Egyptian texts, which inspired him, are still recognizable.




















