The Faroe Islands, a territory of the Kingdom of Denmark, are located 320 kilometers north-northwest of Scotland, and about halfway between Norway and Iceland. The landscape is as breath-taking as it is harsh. Fishing is the main industry of the territory and although it has modernised in many ways, it is still an industry bound by tradition and mainly run by men. Whilst the men go to sea, the young women are drawn abroad for study or training in Copenhagen or other European cities. More than half of those who leave never return and as a result the population of 54,000 has a gender deficit of around 2000 women — the deficit is 10% among women of reproductive age.
Gjestvang was intrigued by how the demographic trend had challenged and changed both Faroese society and the men who chose to stay — this became the backbone of her project. She was curious about the lives of unmarried men in small communities where the impact was most pronounced. Although the project focuses on the Faroe Islands, the trend is symptomatic of what is happening across many other rural areas of Europe and across the world. Atlantic Cowboy provides an insight into how traditional male roles and identity are being challenged by modern society.
The photographs in the book depict the vastness of the land, sky and seascape against which the human presence in dwarfed. They show the domestic interiors and family units, birds being processed and sheep being slaughtered, social celebrations, men at sea, hot tubs and hours of physical graft. These details reveal the harshness of life in the territory alongside steadfast endurance, companionship and community.
'Man was, so to speak, too important and irreplaceable in the role of the ‘hunter’ struggling for the survival of his family and community to be assigned a special position at home. He was a fisher, a whaler, a fowler, a beachcomber, a sheep-breeder, a harvester, a boat builder, a storyteller and many more things at the same time. His performance was not a manifestation of masculinity, but rather an element of the unpretentious way of the islanders of the North…Now, I can just affirm that present-day Faroese…is very different from the society of the late twentieth century. It is not easy to lead the slow and simple way of life of the villages anymore. Things are getting more complex and unpredictable. The ‘pliable men’ are adapting to new societal demands and expectations, but not without resistance.' - Firouz Gaini, Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of the Faroe Islands