arne ingvaldsen  /visual artist/  

Pictures at an exhibition

 

HOME
contact
books
Installations:
other spaces
pictures at an exhibition
landscape picture 2015
levels
tournesol
turquoise II
12 kabuso windows
the wall
turquoise
the X
red
blue, green
red weight
red middle figure
two green angles
pink screen
yellow ellipse
projects:
pink
mound
double bent forms
the tree
immigration
monument
commissions:
material statements
leap splash
pathfinder
it is possible!
skaterspace
spatial cross
two yellow arches
3 sculptures
competition entries::
bergen city hall square
granstangen school, oslo
stjørdal culture house
høvik skole lier
drammen
volda
drawings:
drawings 2018
drawings 2015
line pictures
rome drawings
évora sketch book
évora-series
broads and narrows
greens
charcoal spaces
24 graphic stages
store-vetle-per
paintings:
stripes, fields
architecture
cv
Last update 16.08.2023.
 
Video link: https://youtu.be/boJgq7dzuTY

Photograph: Ø. Klakegg

 
 

PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION

Installation at Gallery Visningsrommet, Kulturhuset USF, Bergen. Wood and mirrors
August 10th - 19th 2018
In cooperation with Eva Kun

 

 
  The gallery is part of a larger culture-producing environment. The USF is an important cultural focal point in Bergen.

One important feature of cultural life is that it creates new images - physical or imaginary - of spaces we live in, and of possible other spaces.

In this situation we searched for a specific expression that can be understood both in concrete terms and in a more elaborate sense.

Our intention was to build a space-specific installation that opens to reflect on exhibition rooms and their function. A "portrait of the gallery" where art acts in direct interaction with the space and the visiting audience.

The exhibition was supported by Kunstsentrene I Norge and NBK Vederlagsfondet.
 
 
 
 

How are images transformed by space?
Do images create space?
What do images show?
What do we really see in them?

 

 
 

Photograph: Ø. Klakegg

 

 

Photograph: Ø. Klakegg

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Photograph: Ø. Klakegg