HEADSCARFS CLOSE TO THE GROUND
ELENA AITZKOA
One performance-week in Oslo
by Elena Aitzkoa
A project commissioned by OSLO PILOT
The autumn of 2016 the poet and sculptress Elena Aitzkoa did performances around the city of Oslo carrying a light blue suitcase full of sculptures. You could find her singing and whistling in the street, probably wearing a headscarf.
City Centre. The common space escapes usage and slips away with the passers by. Only the beggars stay sort of still, taking over an area with their routines from the early morning onwards. So I, who walk because I have nothing particular to do, keep coming across the women. I keep coming across them because almost all the beggars in the area where Im staying are women, of all ages. I think theyre Romanian gypsies, but I might be wrong. They definitely dont live in the street where I see them each morning. Every morning they come from somewhere on the outskirts, and meet here and get organised toge-ther. Theres a group of four or five of them who must be around eighteen to twenty-two years old. Early in the morning theyre on the big street near where I live, but then they spend the whole day going up and down Karl Johans Gate. These women beg on foot. Theyre all really pretty. Theres one I find beautiful. She wears a long purple velvet skirt, wedge mules, and a carefully tied, maybe spotted, headscarf.
The older women are low down on the ground. Theyre huddled in layers of clothing. They set up a cardboard sign and there they spend the whole day, and the fabric of their clothes rubs against the pavement. I can only see glimpses of them: cloth, pavement, hands. Cloth lifted off the pavement by the wind. Sometimes they get up halfway through the morning and have a coffee outside the 7-Eleven with the other women. And have a smoke. And then they use the plastic takeaway cups to carry on begging.
Im going to make sculptures that will fit into a suitcase. And then each day for a week, Ill fill the suitcase with my sculptures and go out into the streets of Oslo. Ill find a place and take them out. As I lay them out, I might sing, or recite a poem. Concrete and cloth.
Elena Aitzkoa