Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Tongue-in-cheek art in Stockholm
The giant bronze sculpture by Swedish artist Dan Wolgers got at last a home in front of the new photography museum in Stockholm. Stockholm Konst and Ports of Stockholm decided to place it outside of Fotografiska instead of central Stadsgården. The name of the sculpture is Torso, and it is said to represent in true Dadaistic spirit the artist´s self-portrait and a woman’s womb. Well, the more you know about Dan Wolgers and his work, the more interesting it gets. His imagination, the provocative productivity and the selling power reminds me somehow of – of – of course of our dear Jani Leinonen...
Friday, July 23, 2010
Catwalk beauties
If you want to see something breathtakingly beautiful go to Perniö where Kaija Rosma is exhibiting her new collection of small fashionable sculptures. Each of those white ladies is a wonder of effortless grace and elegance. If you are quick, you might even buy one – there are still some left!
The exhibition is open until 15.8. from Thursday to Sunday at 12-18. Address is Perniön taidetalo Pyynpivo, Perniöntie 1841.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Veijo Rönkkönen´s weird friends
A visit to Parikkalan patsaspuisto in eastern Finland is an experience you will never forget. You either love it or hate it, a tepid in-between feeling is simply not possible. Veijo Rönkkönen, a self-taught artist, made in his lifetime about 500 concrete sculptures, some of them grinning with real dentures, and placed them around his cottage in Parikkala. They are an amazing bunch of people, plants and animals, full of humour and deep respect for life. The statues have never been exhibited nor did want to travel. If you want to see this famous garden, go there quickly. The artist died in March, and nobody seems ready to keep his inheritance alive. The plants are already almost swallowing the smallest statues...
Rönkkösen patsaspuisto, Kuutostie 611, Koitsanlahti, Parikkala.
Photos © Paula Hietaranta
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Annie Got Her Gun
Annie Leibovitz: Brother Philip and My Father,1988.
The modern Annie sharpshooter is of course Annie Leibovitz who has now a big exhibition A Photographer's Life 1990–2005 in the new Fotografiska museum in Stockholm. Most of her celebrity portraits are so well-known and polished that they seem a little bit dull. Her personal work – family, friends, landscapes - is the jewel of this exhibition. The most impressive picture was the prolonged one of dead Susan Sontag dressed in a fashionable gown she was buried in. It reminded me of the sarcophagi we see in old churches, a monument to honour life and death.
The last day to see Annie´s pictures in Fotografiska, Stadsgårdshamnen 22, quite close to the Viking Line boat terminal, is Sunday 12th September.
The modern Annie sharpshooter is of course Annie Leibovitz who has now a big exhibition A Photographer's Life 1990–2005 in the new Fotografiska museum in Stockholm. Most of her celebrity portraits are so well-known and polished that they seem a little bit dull. Her personal work – family, friends, landscapes - is the jewel of this exhibition. The most impressive picture was the prolonged one of dead Susan Sontag dressed in a fashionable gown she was buried in. It reminded me of the sarcophagi we see in old churches, a monument to honour life and death.
The last day to see Annie´s pictures in Fotografiska, Stadsgårdshamnen 22, quite close to the Viking Line boat terminal, is Sunday 12th September.
Friday, July 9, 2010
One of the pleasures
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