Inuit Stork, photo artist, travels far and wide with his photographs in these years, and on Wednesday the photo artist could put another pin in the world map.
Here, the solo exhibition ‘Heart Beats Hope’ opened at the art museum Kunsten in Aalborg.
Inuit Stork, photo artist, travels far and wide with his photographs in these years, and on Wednesday the photo artist could put another pin in the world map.
Here, the solo exhibition ‘Heart Beats Hope’ opened at the art museum Kunsten in Aalborg.
At the exhibition you will find, among other things, ‘Swing By At 14:14’, a series of photographs from East Greenland which have not been exhibited before.
The exhibition spreads over seven rooms.
– Each exhibition hall will be like a chapter in a book, each with its own atmosphere, curator of the exhibition Louise Bjeldbak Henriksen tells AG.
She has been inspired by the photo book – a medium Inuuteq Storch returns to again and again.
– For me, it is important to publish in book form, because I want it to reach as many people as possible. Making an exhibition is only about one specific city – when you make books you can reach all cities, Inuuteq Storch said earlier this year in a video produced by the New Carlsberg Foundation.

In connection with the exhibition at Kunsten, a photo book, ‘What If You Were Mine Sabine?’, will also be published, with Inuuteq Storch’s photographs and a foreword by the musician and artist Naja P.
‘Heart Beats Hope’ runs 2026 until January 3, 2027. After that, Inuuteq Storch can add another city to his resume when his photographs travel on to the Bonnenfanten art museum in Maastricht, the Netherlands.
















