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Vibeke Slyngstad
Entangled Life -
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Solo exhibitions include (Upcoming) Entangled Life, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London, UK (2023); Dor Beetles Slumbering at Dusk, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London (2021); Mystery of Things, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Berlin (2020); Off Season at OSL contemporary in Oslo (2019), Hjertet er på vandring at the Kristiansand Kunsthall (2018) as well as a show in Haugar Museum in Tønsberg (2017).
Group exhibitions include Uprising, Schloss Görne, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Berlin, Germany (2022); On the Wall, Building Gallery, Milan (2022); Art Paris, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, France (2022); Interaction, curated by Demetrio Paparoni at Fondazione Made in Cloisters, Naples, Italy (2022); On the Wall, curated by Demetrio Paparoni at Building Gallery, Milan, Italy (2022); Enter Art Fair, with Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Copenhagen, Denmark (2021); Contemporary Chaos at Vestfossen Kunstlaboratorium (2018), Eorum Sanai at the Arario Gallery in Cheon An, South Korea (2012) and she participated in the 53rd International Art Exhibition of the Venice Biennale at the Nordic Pavilion (2009).
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Highlights and collections. Vibeke Slyngstad has received various grants, for instance the Government Grant for Artists from the Ingrid Lindbäck Langaard`s Fund in 2015 and 2010, the Bildende Kunstneres Hjelpefond in 2008 and 2007 as well as the Vederlagsfondet and KEMs debutant Prize. Her work can be found in prominent collections such as Art Council Norway; National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Oslo, Norway; Nordea Norway Art Collection; Hydro Norway Art Collection; Telenor Art Collection; Nordea Bank collection; Ministry of foreign affairs, Norway; Norwegian Storting collection (Parliament); The Kistefoss Museum, Norway; Oslo municipality collection; Lundin collection; Kredittbanken collection; Sparebanken Møre collection; Statoil Collection; Storebrand insurance collection; Ålesund Kunstforening collection; Kjell Holms foundation and many others.
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The physicality and human aspect of the work is important to Slyngstad. The landscapes she paints are intimately connected to her personal history, reflecting on identity, belonging, responsibility and time. This is perhaps most obvious in the series, Brusand, titled after a coastline in western Norway. These works depict figures glimpsed at a distance, often behind long grass, their hands dug into their pockets and their backs bent, like the landscape, against the weather. Even when viewed up close, the figures resist assimilation; their bodies are blurred to the point that they become abstracted forms, spectres of memories past. In this way, Slyngstad seems to hint at the vulnerability of not just youth but human life.The second series features large-scale oil canvases, and is named after Shuafat, a predominantly Palestinian neighbourhood in East Jerusalem where Slyngstad encountered a large vacant area of urban land, overgrown with flowers and weeds. Struck by the persistence of nature against a backdrop of human conflict, she documented the area and has since continued to revisit the imagery, playing with crop and scale to further explore its liminality. In these paintings the wilderness appears overblown and chaotic. This is further exaggerated by the perspective: we encounter the scene at ground level, from the eye-level of a child, a small animal or insect wading through the undergrowth. The plants tower into the sky while the thick tangle of stems appears like an impenetrable barrier. At the same time, there is a softness to the landscape – the giant petals of daisies are dropping while the late afternoon sun hangs in a luminous haze. Each image is precisely rendered using a single layer of paint so that the finished surface has a delicate, almost translucent quality. From a distance, this process lends the surfaces the impenetrable appearance of photorealism, but on closer inspection the subtle imperfections become visible, revealing the unshielded nature of the work.
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The exhibition also includes recent iterations of the Shuafat landscape in watercolours. While the play between the sharpened and blurred edges in Slyngstad’s oil paintings mimic the flash and zoom of a camera, her watercolours are looser and rougher in style, creating a heightened sense of fragility, which lays bare their making.The painting from the final series, Kjeholmen, also expresses a sense of transition. Here, it is the flowers, rather than figures, that are caught in the wind, their gossamer petals blown skyward in undulating forms, while their stems are purpling, signalling the end of the summer and their life cycle. However, the melancholy beauty of these scenes invites neither nostalgia nor longing but rather a state of deep reflectiveness.As we move through different times, places and perspectives, Entangled Life asks us to contemplate our place within the subtle, shifting rhythms of the world.
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Vibeke Slyngstad : Entangled Life
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