The people he portrays are nursing home residents and staff, celebrities from magazines or politicians from TV news. He is fascinated by faces, facial expressions and changes that occur in a person throughout time. This can be particularly well observed through self-portraits. An important part of his works are drawings emerging from self-observation, some with surprising perspective techniques, for example depicting the legs from above. It is also interesting to observe how the artist frames people out of group photos, copying what is depicted in the picture together with the surroundings, be it the ear or the shoulder of a bystander.
The artist views the passage of time very freely. This can be seen in his portraits as well as in his series of annuals. With the help of this effective graphic series, Edmunds instead asks his peers where someone could be located or what they would do in one year or another.
One of the artist’s obsessions is striped or checkered pajama pants, which he returns to depicting again and again. He must have several pairs of striped pajama pants!
Edmunds is also very sensitive to any kind of comments, whether about his appearance or his work.
The exhibition is part of the project “Hidden Worlds Expanding”, which is part of the main program of Tartu 2024, which focuses on the outsider art of Eastern Europe. We got to the work of Edmunds Jaudzems thanks to the project’s Latvian partner Sarma Freiberga, with whom we visited the nursing home in Jelgava.
The exhibition is supported by the Cultural Endowment of Estonia and Tartu 2024.