a white stoneware sculpture "Skärva", Sweden 2006.
Signed EVAHILD 06. Measurements ca 42 x 39 x 25,5 cm.
Minor surface dirt, stains.
”Gudomliga skärvor - kult blir konst”, The monastery in Ystad in collaboration with the Historical Museum at Lund University, Sweden, 19 februari - 31 december 2007.
Eva Hild (b. 1966) lives and works in Sparsör outside Borås. She mainly makes sculptures in white or black stoneware clay; organic, non-figurative forms that move between inner and outer space. The ceramic figures are hand-built with thin clay rolls which she slowly curls up to volumes, which are then polished with sandpaper. The surface is sprayed with kaolin, a white fine-grained porcelain clay, and the larger ones are finally coated with silicate paint. The process is long lasting, only making the structure can take five to six months.
Her first separate exhibition was held at the Inger Molin Gallery in Stockholm in 2000 and her sculptures have since been exhibited at the Nancy Margolis Gallery in New York and Galerie NeC in Paris.
January 14 - February 20, 2016 Hild displayed monumental sculptures in the exhibition "Sinkhole" at Galleri Andersson / Sandström, Stockholm. She is represented in museums and art collections nationally and internationally, including at the Musee de Sèvres in Paris, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Museum of Contemporary Ceramics in Shanghai and the National Museum in Stockholm.
Eva Hild lives and works in Sparsör in the municipality of Borås. She primarily creates sculptures in white or black stoneware clay; organic, non-figurative forms that move between inner and outer space. Her first solo exhibition was at Galleri Inger Molin in Stockholm in 2000, and her sculptures have since been shown at galleries such as Nancy Margolis Gallery in New York, Galleri Andersson Sandström in Umeå, and Galerie NeC in Paris. She is represented in museums and art collections nationally and internationally, including Musee de Sèvres in Paris, Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Museum of Contemporary Ceramics in Shanghai, and Nationalmuseum in Stockholm.
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