Surely the best
contemporary show I saw all year was SlowArt at Sweden’s Nationalmuseum in
Stockholm. A compilation of stunning objects from both the craft and fine art
fields, the exhibition was fresh, captivating, inspiring.
I am very picky
about crafts; I can’t abide what I call “gift shop” crafts—all those striped
wood cutting boards, Memphis-inspired knickknacks, machine-part lawn ornaments
and the like, but I love crafts that are rooted in ancient traditions. I also
love contemporary art that has a craft element to it.
The artists featured
in SlowArt share a deliberate, handcrafted
approach—an intrinsic part of their creative process. Producing the kind of
work they do is a meditative exercise, often involving monotonous, repetitive
action and sometimes, even pain. Each of the artists in the show use materials
generally associated with crafts: pottery, weaving, jewelry making, the
difference being that craft artists produce work that is functional, whereas fine art artists produce work, some of which suggest functionality, but is really
meant to be looked at.
An example of the
latter happens to be my favorite piece: Necklace
by Helena Sandström. Made with pearls and eggshells strung onto gold wire it’s
a fantasy of a necklace. The impossibility of the piece is what I love about
it. Such audacity. I can only imagine the hours and hours that went into making
it. The many failed attempts at breaking the eggshells just so, and then the
challenge of affixing them onto the wire with the pearls. It’s both funny and edgy.
Looking at it, one can sense the frustration and commitment that went into it. A
metaphor for life.
I also loved
Renata Francescon’s Sub Rosa. A yummy
confection of solids and voids, it’s both ethereal and weighty. Francescon uses
her hands to form her creamy porcelain rose petals leaving her fingerprints in
the clay. It’s tactile and elegant.
Pasi Välimaa
refers to his finely executed embroidery piece on view as “luxury
manufacturing” on account of the fact he worked on it for so long (a year) making
sure it was allowed to develop at its own pace without the pressure of needing
to finish it. The black thread on white linen is simple and austere and has
that wonderful, almost childlike, handmade quality one sees in classic Marimekko
textiles.
Taking a much more
opulent approach, Suzy Strindberg’s landscape, Embroidery, is a lushly rendered piece composed of minute stitches.
It verges into the three-dimensional in parts, so heavily is it embroidered.
Using fiberglass
mixed into porcelain clay (a material she developed) Jane Reumert’s Snöuggla (Snow Owl) appears to be made
with the feathers of the bird its title references. It’s a beautiful, almost
elegiac piece.
Sinuous and
sensual, Eva Hild’s Keramiska former Nr2
(Ceramic Shapes No 2) co-opts its interior space making it a major player in
the piece. The smooth white of the outside shape contrasts wonderfully to the blackness
within.
Gunilla Lagerhem
Ullberg uses actual petals and leaves to create kaleidoscope arrangements. The
colors are muted—the petals in most cases, are nearly translucent—and the
arrangements are so inventive that even though they may sound trite, in her
hands they aren’t.
While in Sweden
and Denmark I was blown away by the traditional Scandinavian woven rugs that I
saw. Tribal looking, they reminded me somewhat of Navajo rugs with interesting
designs, sophisticated color pairings and vegetable dyes. I was amazed I hadn’t
ever heard of them before. Malou Andersson’s Spär (Tracks), a wintry hued piece featuring animal and human
footprints (and ski tracks) puts a contemporary spin on a traditional craft.
Another example of
weaving is Annika Ekdahl’s tapestry Road
Movie (verdure): Visiting Mom. Featuring a weird combination of animals,
plants and objects that defy gravity and one-point perspective, Ekdahl’s work
is enigmatic and ancient. Ekdahl produces one square meter per month, dyeing
only a few ounces of wool at a time, knowing the exact shade can never be
replicated. This ensures that something random will affect the piece, a welcome
note of unexpectedness in a process (tapestry weaving) that is mapped out way
in advance.
A completely
different effect was achieved by Irene Agbaje in her tapestry Binary. An abstract work of shimmering
squares that seemed to both bleed into one another and hover above,
it reminded me of fabric I’ve seen from Southeast Asia and also evoked the work
of Ross Bleckner.
I loved the
simplicity of Tore Svensson’s Bowl.
Iron with a prefect rectangular broken line of gold, it looked both delicate
and strong: a valuable treasure belonging to a Viking king.
I also admired
Cecilia Levy’s bowl, Red made of torn
paper. It’s a beautiful piece that required skill and patience to be
transformed into a perfectly formed three-dimensional object from a one-dimensional
sheet of paper.
I have seen text
on paper used before and it’s a look I like. Janna Syvänoja also uses it,
stringing slips of paper from an encyclopedia onto wire to create her handsome
snake-like necklace. The text, visible at certain points, forms a speckled
pattern. Where it’s not visible, the necklace is the ivory shade of the blank
parts of the paper. Made from manmade materials it looks natural, organic.
Helena Hörstedt’s
raw silk and leather dress, Broken Shadow
made quite a statement. A remarkable creation, it recalls the work of Alexander
McQueen. But though fierce, it does not possess the feminine sexiness of
McQueen’s haute couture numbers. But then again Hörstedt sewed the whole thing herself,
he did not.
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