Noora Sandgren: Water Bodies, 2026. Photo: HAM/Kerttu Malinen. Water Bodies Artist Noora Sandgren Yrjönkatu 21 B, Helsinki The work consists of six photographic works on glass, and welcomes visitors to the Yrjönkatu swimming hall on the stone wall of the entrance. Water Bodies is a celebration of the life-giving power of water and the interaction between different organisms. The starting point for these works has been the primordial sea and bodies of water – the environments created and maintained by water, such as lakes, rivers, and mires, but also the human body and domestic gardens. The artworks have been made on Lake Hiidenvesi, in the woods of Helsinki’s Central Park, in Kilpisjärvi, Tvärminne, Oulujärvi, and on the islands of Harakka, Örö and Seili. Dialogue with scientists at different university field research stations and discussions with biologists from the Harakka Nature Centre supported the artist’s creative process. In large part, Sandgren’s artistic thinking took place whilst swimming or by flowing waters. Each body of water is its own living biotope, and its processes adapt to the seasons and react to human activities. In actual fact, singular concepts such as human or the sea are complex co-operative systems formed of a vast variety of organisms. Much of life and living organisms is still unknown. Sandgren’s Water Bodies makes space for organisms that can’t be seen with the human eye – microscopic creatures are given the spotlight, while the human figure retreats to the background. In these works, different scales overlap and the traces of different agencies mix together. Sandgren works in the field of expanded photography. The photographs have been made without a camera, and record the touch of microbes, breath and the weather on light-sensitive material, drawn by sunlight. The artworks combine traces of milk and plant pigments, impressions made by family members, microscopic images of phytoplankton and zooplankton, and speculative drawings based on microbe samples from the atmosphere. Important sources for her works are family, microscopic organisms, sites, and research. Water Bodies is an ode to the tiny powerful agents that maintain life, like cyanobacteria and diatoms, which produce a significant amount of the world’s oxygen. “The works are a result of moments of aquatic becoming-with. They invite the viewer’s curiosity and encourage interaction with different forms of life. The works give space to ponder life’s fundamental elements, its connection and continuum. Floating in the water at Yrjönkatu Swimming Hall, we recognise our strength and our bodies, and are renewed – as a part of the wider aquatic network,” artist Noora Sandgren says. Noora Sandgren (b. 1977) works with photography, text, and spatial and event-based works of art. She explores multispecies co-existence and often shares authorship of the works with the weather, different materials and other forms of life. She collaborates on multidisciplinary projects and is part of the Bioart Society. The work belongs to the City of Helsinki’s art collection, which is managed and curated by HAM. See also a PDF publication related to the work: Water Bodies At map