dirt.
Artists
Laurence Sturla, Astrid Svangren, Moa Alskog
Press release
Moa Alskog’s practice unfolds around the human relation to nature. She builds worlds with images and text, in dialog with other artists, historians and scientists. Often by making the small, big. Currently, Alskog works on portraits of soil-microorganisms. The vital lives that live in the dirt that cover our planet. The portraits are part of an ongoing project dealing with the idea of the Utopia. Method, material and motif are equally important in the artist’s work. Alskog (re-)uses the material she finds around her, for example wasted insects net, vinyl floor as canvas, plastic bag frames, images and ideas. She regards the materials as meaning-bearing elements and the provenance of those significantly influence her choice of method and motif.
Laurence Sturla’s visual language of his ceramic sculptures are part industrial, mechanical, part engine, part architecture. They draw heavily from Sturla’s upbringing in Swindon, once part of the thriving industrial revolution in England but now one of many English towns lined with empty factories. Sturla’s post-industrialist machines illustrate the fallacy between technological precision and our (in)ability to recall and visually digest space, function or logic.
Astrid Svangren’s painterly work is multidimensional. Her paintings relate to the limitations the stretcher provides, but they also expand three dimensionally into their surroundings, and move from ceilings and wooden constructions. The spatial paintings can be interpreted as an extension of the traditional painterly process, and the materiality differ from tulle to fish net and cellophane. In her artistry, Svangren avoids the expected and she lets the working process be portrayed as part of the finished work. The outcome of this somewhat organic process are paintings and spatial installations that are in constant movement and that dwell in a borderland, both in regards to their material and to their subject matter. The works speak of memories and dreams and very elegantly challenge all the senses of the viewer.
- Through
- 01 March 2025
- Venue
- Lagune Ouest
- Address
- Rådhusstræde 10
- Hours
- Wednesday-Friday 11am-3pm, and by appointment
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