The English writer and critic Brian Dillon writes in the introduction to his book Suppose a Sentence about copying and collecting sentences. This is something he has done for years at the end of his many notebooks. What happens to these sentences when they are taken out of their original context and why does he choose a specific sentence? He writes that over the years the sentences have composed a parallel timeline of affinity.
Language can evoke images and images often inspire language: a cycle where one thing generates the other. Anna Bjerger’s paintings take prosaic photographic images as a starting point. She elevates the images by removing them from their context and transforming them through the act of painting. We are invited to view the motif in a new light. Much like a sentence cut out from a text Bjerger’s paintings shift what we find valuable in the image and attempt to reveal previously unseen elements. This can be psychological, personal or formal, a weaving together of qualities to suggest new readings. The result is a seemingly incongruous collage of images where the materiality of painting is emphasised to explore the motifs. This disharmony allows unexpected connections to be made between each of the images and for them to begin to have a conversation with one another.
Working toward the exhibition Bjerger was thinking about landscape painting but by focusing on the physicality of the medium she has redirected her gaze inwards. Instead of a view we are presented with an obscured or blocked scene and she has allowed her intuitive painting to lead her to a dream like place where we are aware something unknown might happen. These psychological landscapes attempt to push at the boundaries set by the idea of landscape painting and the upping in scale seems designed to immerse us in this environment of drips and brush marks as well as the image itself. There is an implied disorientation that could be anywhere and nowhere.
Anna Bjerger (b.1973) lives and works in Småland, Sweden. She is educated at S:t Martins School of Art and Design and Royal College of Art in London, UK. She has exhibited in Sverige and internationally since the beginning of the 2000s. Selected solo exhibitions: Gl. Holtegaard Konsthal, Holte, Denmark (2020), Galleri Bo Bjerggaard, Copenhagen, Denmark (2019), Galleri Magnus Karlsson, Stockholm, Sweden (2018, 2015), Le Manoir, Banyuls sur Mer, France (2017), 0–0 LA, Los Angeles, US (2017), Kristianstads konsthall, Sweden (2017), David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen, Denmark (2016, 2012, 2008), Galleria Monica de Cardenas, Milano, Italy (2014), Fullersta Gård, Stockholm, Sweden (2013), Paradise Row, London, UK (2012, 2010), Växjö Konsthall, Sweden (2012), Galerie Gabriel Rolt, Amsterdam, Netherlands (2011, 2009), Peter Bergman Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden (2010, 2008). Her paintings are in the collections of Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Nehterlands, Zabludowicz Collection, UK and Tishman Speyer Collection, US.
The exhibition Blanket for a Sail by Anna Bjerger opens without a reception on Saturday March 27 and runs through May 1. The gallery is currently open regular hours. Please visit our website or follow us on social media for up to date information. We are following the guidelines from the Public Health Agency of Sweden. A limited number of visitors (5) will be allowed in the gallery. We therefore kindly ask you to have patience if waiting time arises on certain occasions.
Gallery name: Galleri Magnus Karlsson
Address: Fredsgatan 12, Stockholm
Opening hours: Tue-Fri 12:00 - 17:00, Sat 12:00 - 16:00
Open: 27.03.2021 - 01.05.2021