About The Work
While becoming an artist, Kjartansson spent several years working in advertising. The large-scale woodcut Creative Space refers to this period in his life and is an homage to the people suffering under the tyranny of creativity. For him, the sign saying "Come in but only with fresh ideas or fresh coffee” is representative of the special, at times somewhat forced sense of humour, enthusiasm and creativity that often characterise this kind of workplace. Kjartansson himself perceived his workplace as joyous yet profoundly melancholic; and it was in this perception of this environment that he found the joy of freedom in his own art practice. The woodcut is related to his works on privileged 21st century uneasiness like “Scandinavian Pain” and “Scenes from Western Culture”. The use of the medium is a nod to the suffering woodcuts of Edward Munch.
About Ragnar Kjartansson
From The Magazine
- Art 101: "What I'd Buy This April": Artspace's Advisor Hannah Parker Shares The Artworks In Her Cart
- Interviews & Features: “I Want My Art to Be Satanic”: Ragnar Kjartansson on Learning From Kanye, and Pursuing the Sublime in the West Bank
- Interviews & Features: 10 Artists to Watch This July
- News & Events: High Art, Low Expectations: New Broad Museum Gives L.A. a Course in Blue-Chip 101
- News & Events: 5 Boutique Art Hotels to Stay in This Summer
Woodcut on Somerset 400 gsm
Paper size: 135 x 91.5 cm (53.15 x 36.02 in) | Image size: 122 x 81.5 cm (48.03 x 32.09 in)
This work is signed and numbered by the artist.
About The Work
While becoming an artist, Kjartansson spent several years working in advertising. The large-scale woodcut Creative Space refers to this period in his life and is an homage to the people suffering under the tyranny of creativity. For him, the sign saying "Come in but only with fresh ideas or fresh coffee” is representative of the special, at times somewhat forced sense of humour, enthusiasm and creativity that often characterise this kind of workplace. Kjartansson himself perceived his workplace as joyous yet profoundly melancholic; and it was in this perception of this environment that he found the joy of freedom in his own art practice. The woodcut is related to his works on privileged 21st century uneasiness like “Scandinavian Pain” and “Scenes from Western Culture”. The use of the medium is a nod to the suffering woodcuts of Edward Munch.
About Ragnar Kjartansson
From The Magazine
- Art 101: "What I'd Buy This April": Artspace's Advisor Hannah Parker Shares The Artworks In Her Cart
- Interviews & Features: “I Want My Art to Be Satanic”: Ragnar Kjartansson on Learning From Kanye, and Pursuing the Sublime in the West Bank
- Interviews & Features: 10 Artists to Watch This July
- News & Events: High Art, Low Expectations: New Broad Museum Gives L.A. a Course in Blue-Chip 101
- News & Events: 5 Boutique Art Hotels to Stay in This Summer
Printed by Niels Borch Jensen Editions. Published by BORCH Editions.
- Ships in 10 to 14 business days from Denmark.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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