Original artwork description:

64x84 cm | Filler, oak panel

This work was made using a 5,2-meter long stick. The method is inspired by photos of Henri Matisse who sometimes used long sticks to draw with, both to be able to draw from the bed and to have oversight over large drawings while drawing. I, on the other hand, was instead of facilitating the drawing process, trying to make it physically harder to draw. Because one of the reasons why we sometimes admire children's drawings is that there is a gap between intention and ability which create tension in the drawing, and this method tries to set up the same conditions.

At the same time, the works deal with the crude and harsh nature of language. Signs and symbols always contain categories of meaning rather than the often subjective and specific statements we´re trying to express. It's like shooting mosquitos with cannons. No matter how hard we try to transmit a message to the receiver it always comes out distorted on the other end. And the growing contemporary use of emojis, symbols and predefined responses instead of letters and individually formulated sentences might be easy to use, but perhaps doesn't increase understanding in communication.

The barred S is a symbol of money, an entity we often need to be part of our interactions with others around us. The concept can be more complex than we think if we understand it as freedom. Without money our freedom to operate is limited. Freedom is also what designates a subject, the ability to make independent choices, to have free will. Psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan uses the symbol to describe the split in the subject by language. So the distance between what we mean and what we say when we use this symbol can be greater than we think. But on the other hand, things we cannot understand we might better stay silent about, and using a symbol can be a way of speaking without really saying anything. And sometimes that's exactly what we want.

Materials used:

Filler (coarse and fine) in oak frame

Tags:
#abstract #painting #minimalism #oak frame #filler 
#415 Long Stick Drawing (2022)
Painting
by Johan Söderström

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£1,204.7 Alert

Original artwork description
Minus

64x84 cm | Filler, oak panel

This work was made using a 5,2-meter long stick. The method is inspired by photos of Henri Matisse who sometimes used long sticks to draw with, both to be able to draw from the bed and to have oversight over large drawings while drawing. I, on the other hand, was instead of facilitating the drawing process, trying to make it physically harder to draw. Because one of the reasons why we sometimes admire children's drawings is that there is a gap between intention and ability which create tension in the drawing, and this method tries to set up the same conditions.

At the same time, the works deal with the crude and harsh nature of language. Signs and symbols always contain categories of meaning rather than the often subjective and specific statements we´re trying to express. It's like shooting mosquitos with cannons. No matter how hard we try to transmit a message to the receiver it always comes out distorted on the other end. And the growing contemporary use of emojis, symbols and predefined responses instead of letters and individually formulated sentences might be easy to use, but perhaps doesn't increase understanding in communication.

The barred S is a symbol of money, an entity we often need to be part of our interactions with others around us. The concept can be more complex than we think if we understand it as freedom. Without money our freedom to operate is limited. Freedom is also what designates a subject, the ability to make independent choices, to have free will. Psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan uses the symbol to describe the split in the subject by language. So the distance between what we mean and what we say when we use this symbol can be greater than we think. But on the other hand, things we cannot understand we might better stay silent about, and using a symbol can be a way of speaking without really saying anything. And sometimes that's exactly what we want.

Materials used:

Filler (coarse and fine) in oak frame

Tags:
#abstract #painting #minimalism #oak frame #filler 

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This artwork is sold by Johan Söderström from Norway

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Johan Söderström

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Location Norway

About
Artist statement. Ever since I started working with art, I have searched for a mode of painting that felt right and consistent to me. I wanted the materials and methods... Read more

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