The Journey through Work

Hi, I’m Kristine!

It’s pronounced Kristin-uh, since I’m Norwegian and we pronounce our “e.”

 
 

To understand some of my work, I need to introduce what happened before.

I started as a photographer in NYC in 2002, when I moved there on my way home from the San Francisco State University journalism program. I was supposed to stay a year but stayed for five.

 
 

I learned about a Norwegian girl my age racing the Iditarod and went to Alaska to follow her for her first Iditarod race. I was supposed to go for three weeks, but stayed with her for a year, living in the bush and couch surfing along with her and her 16 dogs through Alaska. This work has been ongoing for 15 years, and I expect it to continue. She’s since become the World Champion dog musher twice and currently lives as a farmer in rural Norway.

 
 

 After Alaska I finally returned home to Norway, I had been living in the States for 11 years. I went north, to the University of Tromsø, to pursue a masters degree in Visual Cultural Studies. I made a project on Sami Reindeer herders in Alaska for my thesis, including a 30 minute movie.

Preview to my 2010 documentary Sami Reindeer Herders in Alaska:

 
 
 
 

Then I moved to Oslo, my hometown, and became a daily freelancer for Dagens Næringsliv, a prominent business paper in Norway. 

 
 

I worked there until I went on maternity leave with my son in 2013.

 
 

I never came off materinty leave. The following year I had twins, only 15 months after the first. We moved to Vancouver, Canada, and the combination of starting in a new place and not being able to afford childcare meant a big shift in my career.

So I stayed home with the kids while I found new ways to earn a living with photography while documenting my journey through motherhood.

 
 

What I learned from photographing my kids that photographing in New York, the Arctic and Oslo couldn’t teach me was reading people through the complete immersion of unfiltered body language. I was made to watch small humans find their way in the world and this work has taught me to better understand moments to the point where I didn’t even need the kids’ faces to tell my story. The work with the children have helped me access another level of empathy and patience, helping me be a better storyteller moving forward.

The project on the children, Learning To Speak Bear, is set to be published as a book from Yoffy Press later this fall. 

Kristine Nyborg