A study for the series "Vårat rum"
Signed Peter Dahl and dated -69. Canvas 55 x 65 cm.
Galerie Prisma, Stockholm
We recognize Peter Dahl's green sofa from the series "Vårat Rum" ("Our Room") 1969, "Drömmar i soffhörnet" ("Dreams in the Sofa Corner") 1970, and "Kalles Dröm" ("Kalle's Dream"), 1971. These paintings that criticise society are aimed at the Swedish bourgeoisie: dreams and reality are mixed, so that the boundaries can be viewed as blurred. It portrays how a person's future dreams and integrity is put down by the economic and political powers. This was an ambitious attempt to find a common point with the public and their demands.
Peter Dahl himself commented on this series in 1992: "I exhibited the series "Vårat rum" at Galerie Prisma II on Sibyllegatan in Stockholm. This was in January 1970 and I presented it as a draft of a painted series. A draft, because I dreamed about creating a larger and more accomplished series with bigger and better images, as rich in content as a TV series - like Forsyte-sagan (The Fortyse Saga), although based on our society at the end of the 1960s. I was in a rush, because I feared that someone else would do so before me with a similar idea. Preferably, I would have wanted to paint a series directly on the walls of a grand venue, like a modern Albertus Pictor, because I realized that the series would split up when the exhibition was over.
I was quite desperate. The debate about art's purpose, or its lack of, had really gotten to me. Oil painting could sometimes feel ineffective in a world that looked the way it did and where you could already see so much on TV. New techniques and medias felt threatening. Through oil painting, subjects were painted by hand, which others let technology portray. Time consuming and going in the wrong direction. I should have gone into film- or TV-making instead. But this was what I was going to continue with, now that I had painted during my whole long life. I am quite old now, I felt, at thirty-give years old..." (From Folke Edwards, "Peter Dahl", 1996, page 69-70).
Peter Dahl is painter, printmaker, sculptor, and author. He was born in Oslo and came to Stockholm during the war years of the 1940s, studying at cadémie Libre in 1957 and then attended the Royal Institute of Art from 1958 to 1963 under the guidance of Lennart Rhode. He worked as a teacher at Gelesborg’s school during the 60s and 70s, and was the head professor of painting at Valand Art Academy in Gothenburg from 1975-79. Dahl paints in an expressive, realistic style with bright colours, sensual figure compositions, his art a vessel for his criticism towards upper class luxury and petty bourgeois environments. Influenced by the expressionism of Francis Bacon, he depicted the sequence of events in Medelsvensson's daydreams about "the sweet life" in the upper social group in a series of images. Over the years, Peter Dahl continued with thematic painting. From 1981 to 1984, he illustrated Fredman's Epistles in 87 pictures.
He is outgoing and often depicts his own life with a touch of self-irony. His work is rooted in Swedish tradition, often revisiting and renewing old themes. In recent years, his style has become softer and more sensual, with his dance and bacchanalian motifs taking on a Rococo-like quality. As a printmaker, Dahl is particularly known for his congenial illustrations of Bellman's "Fredman's Epistles." Peter Dahl is considered one of the great artists of our time, immensely productive and consistently popular.
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