‘I Felt Like a Time Traveler’: 6 Months Without the Internet

The artist Nastja Säde Rönkkö talks about what life was like when she utterly disconnected from the online world for half a year

Thomas McMullan
OneZero

--

Photo: Tim Bowditch

FFor six months, the Finnish artist Nastja Säde Rönkkö lived entirely without the internet. Every aspect of her life in London, from navigating the city to working and socializing, was taken off-line. If someone sent her an email, they would get an automatic reply inviting them to either call her, visit her in person, or send a letter.

Over the months, she amassed postcards, love letters, detailed correspondences, and scrawled notes. A collection of these are currently on display as part of an exhibition in London’s Somerset House, 24/7: A Wake-Up Call for our Non-Stop World.

Now that she’s back online, I spoke to Rönkkö over Skype about the “six months without” project, and the mournful nostalgia she uncovered for a slower kind of communication.

OneZero: What did you want to achieve with the project?

Nastja Säde Rönkkö: The starting point was when I realized how young the internet is, and how much it has changed us, our relationships, our society. If it was taken away one day, we couldn’t…

--

--

Thomas McMullan
OneZero

Freelance writer | @BBCNews @guardian @frieze_magazine @SightSoundmag @wiredUK @TheTLS others | Also @GardensBritish | Rep’d by @harriet__moore | Novel coming