ART CITIES:Oslo-Sun and Spring in January
The exhibition, “Sun and Spring in January-Next Generation in Norwegian Contemporary Art” focuses on a new generation of Norwegian contemporary artists who represent a great diversity of conceptual premises and visual expressions. In addition to the artists, the project presents a new generation of Norwegian art writers, as well as drawing attention to the art collector as a constructive part of the Norwegian contemporary art scene.
By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Astrup Fearnley Museet Archive
In the exhibition a unique link is made between artists, art writers and collectors; six young artists are connected to a respective art writer and art collector. The trios create a framework for the project that forms the basis for an interesting and important dialogue between artists, writers and collectors. In the exhibition Astrup Fearnley Museet and Talent Norge have chosen to highlight the diversity that characterises the Norwegian art scene, as represented by the following artists: Miriam Hansen, Johanne Hestvold, Anders Holen, Henrik Olai Kaarstein, Mercedes Mühleisen and Constance Tenvik. Miriam Hansen experiments with plants and organic elements in her object-based installations, introducing the smell, mythology and narratives of plants. Johanne Hestvold reinvents modernist forms and materials in the age of computer drawings, giving a new poetic flair to abstract sculptures. Also, a sculptor, Anders Holen assembles figures cast in bronze to make poetic but enigmatic narratives. Henrik Olai Kaarstein is a painter who confronts collages of colored forms with images of body parts, evoking sensuality and fetishism. The video artist Mercedes Mühleisen has created an animated sculpture based on the book “Marvels of Pond-life” (1861) by Henry James Slack, that narrates a meticulous description of microscopic creatures found in the water of a pond. Constance Tenvik presents an installation loosely based on a novel by Xavier de Maistre, “A Journey Around my Room” (1794), bringing the spectator into an imaginary space that presents a mixture of sculpture, costumes and theatre. Each of the artists are presented through an important text by: Ina Hagen, Ingrid Halland, Simen Joachim Helsvig, Maria Horvei, Nora Joung and Nicholas Norton. The writers have each in their own way opened the artistic mechanisms and content of the works and put them into a wider context. The writers’ place in the exhibition is equal to that of the artists in terms of the experience and reading of the works. The collaborated collectors are: Clarksons Platou / Peter M. Anker, Knut and Cecilie Brundtland, Bettina Ford Jebsen, C. Ludens Ringnes Stiftelse / Christian Ringnes, AKO kunststiftelse / Nicolai Tangen and Talent Norge. Throughout art history, collectors have played a significant role in supporting artists. In recent years in Oslo they have become more visible, acting not only as an economic support system, but also as protagonists in the formation of a consensus surrounding the artists on the local art scene.
Info: Curators: Gunnar B. Kvaran and Therese Möllenhoff, Astrup Fearnley Museet, Strandpromenaden 2, Oslo, Duration: 25/1-5/5/19, Days & Hours: Tue-Wed & Fri 12:00-17:00, Thu 12:00-19:00, Sat-Sun 11:00-17:00, www.afmuseet.no