Totally Stockholm 1
Exhibition: Ida Idaida and Fathia Mohidin Back in
August the artists Ida Idaida and Fathia Mohidin won the annual Maria Bonnier Dahlin’s Grant, and as well as the prize of 100,000 kronor, they’ll also be getting the chance to show their work at an exhibition at Bonniers Konsthall. Idaida, whose themes include trauma and fear, and Mohidin, who blends research with video and sculpture, will have more space than is usual for the grant winners’ exhibition, with Bonniers handing over their entire hall to the young artists. Ida Idaida and Fathia Mohidin, Bonniers Konsthall, opens Dec 2 Ida Idaida, Truth is not delivered whole but received in parts a rotten corpse flesh slushed acid rain burn the scars (2018), Installation view Konstakademien, Stockholm. Photo: Jean-Babtiste Béranger Gig: Alice Boman Alice Boman kept her fans waiting. The Malmö musician had first captured people’s attention with her dreamy, whisper-elegant take on pop music back in 2013 with the release of her debut EP Skisser, but it took until the start of this year for her to release a full-length album. When it arrived, Dream On was worth the wait, a record that expands and evolves her sound without losing what made her sparkle in the first place. Her Stockholm fans can catch her live at Fasching on November 29, with two shows to keep audiences small and corona-safe. Alice Boman, Fasching, Nov 29 27 Photo: Märta Thisner