No connection to server
351
1286576

Andreas Eriksson

(Sweden, Born 1975)
Estimate
200 000 - 250 000 SEK
17 700 - 22 100 EUR
18 200 - 22 800 USD
Hammer price
150 000 SEK
Covered by droit de suite

By law, the buyer will pay an artist fee for this work of art. This fee is 5% of the hammer price, or less. For more information about this law:

Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

Purchasing info
Image rights

The artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.

For condition report contact specialist
Louise Wrede
Stockholm
Louise Wrede
Specialist Contemporary Art, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Andreas Eriksson
(Sweden, Born 1975)

"Fönster och träd II"

Signed Andreas Eriksson and dated 2010 on verso. Dated on the stretcher Medelplana 2010. Acrylic and oil on canvas 180 x 150 cm.

Provenance

Galleri Andersson/Sandström, Stockholm.
Private collection, Stockholm.

More information

Andreas Eriksson’s career has had a stratospheric rise ever since he was accepted at the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm at only eighteen years old. His big breakthrough came when he represented Sweden at the 2011 Venice Biennale. Today Andreas Eriksson is represented by some of the leading galleries in the world – Stephen Friedman Gallery in London and neugerrimschneider in Berlin.
Nature and specifically trees are central to his work, and his practice is often referred to in terms of a northern European painting tradition. When Eriksson suddenly became afflicted with ‘electromagnetic hypersensitivity’ at the beginning of the 2000s he felt forced to leave his life in the vibrant art capital Berlin, where up until then he had been living and working. He instead chose to live in relative isolation in an electromagnetically screened house by Kinnekulle in the Västergötland province of Sweden. The cacophony of the city was exchanged for quiet walks in nature. This contrast is a clear presence in Eriksson’s images and through his artistic practice he explores the duality of contemporary human life – our dependence on and our relationship to modernity.
Jennifer Higgie (art critic and editor at Frieze magazine) wrote the following in Moderna Museet’s catalogue for the 2011 Venice Biennale, when Eriksson represented Sweden:

"He (Andreas Eriksson) states that nature is something neutral to him, something that is ‘highly precise and strikingly random’ and which lacks a connection to ‘a deliberate, constructed or strategic context’. He does not consider nature to be something that is in opposition with culture, even if he admits that it is impossible not to filter an environment – or a painting or a sculpture – through one’s own cultural and personal associations. It is, in other words, impossible to see something as solely one thing. Everything generates a chain of connections, an allusion to something else – a memory."

Eriksson is sought after for exhibitions both internationally and within Sweden. In 2007 he received the highly prestigious award ‘Baloise Art Price’ at Statement, Art Basel. His first solo-show at a major art institution was at Bonniers Konsthall in the spring of 2014. The exhibition was a critical success and toured Trondheim Kunstmuseum in Norway, Centre PasquArt in Switzerland and the Reykjavik Art Museum, Iceland.

Artist

Andreas Eriksson is a Swedish artist, born in 1975 in Lidköping. Eriksson studied at the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm between 1993 and 1998, and works with various techniques in his artistic practice, including painting, photography, sculpture, textiles, and graphics.
A recurring theme in Andreas Eriksson's works is the presence of nature; the light over meadows, forests, and mountains is shaped into structures, blocks of color, and organic formations. Often, a motif emerges that can be interpreted as landscapes, shifting between figurative and abstract spatialities. However, Eriksson suggests that the rich and almost sculptural works can just as easily be seen as something other than interpretations of nature; as internal, diffuse landscapes where the viewer can linger.
After a period of work in Berlin, Andreas Eriksson now resides in Medelplana on Kinnekulle in Västergötland. In 2011, he represented Sweden at the Venice Biennale with Fia Backström. Eriksson is also represented at institutions such as the Gothenburg Museum of Art, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, the Nasher and David J. Haemseigger Collection of Contemporary Art in the USA, the Sara Hilden Art Museum in Finland, and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark. He became a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts in 2014.

Read more