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Maria Friberg

(Sweden, Born 1966)
Maria Friberg
(Sweden, Born 1966)

MARIA FRIBERG. C-print mounted to aluminum, signed and numbered 2/25 on verso.

"Trinity", 2000. C-print, laminate, aluminum. Each part 25x19.5 cm.

Minor wear. Slightly lose laminate on some parts.

Provenance

Galleri Charlotte Lund, Stockholm.

Literature

Galleri Charlotte Lund (e.a), "Maria Friberg - Trinity", 2000, illustrated. One of the photographs is also illustrated on the cover.

More information

Three bodies have fallen from the sky. They know nothing about who they are, or where they’ve landed. Their bodies cast sharp shadows on the ground. Is this planet Earth? One crawls, one sits, one stands. It’s as though the three men (do they know they’re men, do they know each other?) have suddenly been pulled into he evolutionary process. They fumble forward and begin to develop.

A person is first and foremost a body. If we remove all social influences and cultural patterns we find this one thing: a body that can be measured, weighed and studied. There’s something abstract and surreal about these American men. There’s nothing unusual about their features, and yet they appear strange. Are they Americans who have been placed in another dimension, or are they aliens, doing their best to imitate typical Americans?

Art during the last few decades has continued to return to questions concerning the social construction of human identity. This is especially true of the feminist art that developed in the United States during the late 1970s. With artists such as Sherrie Levine and Cindy Sherman the female subject is treated like an artifact – the result of media and social stereotypes and codes. It’s about time the same discussion, with the same intensity, is applied to male identity. How are men constructed?

These three men could use some help. At first glance they appear completely ”normal”. But it’s as though they are in a room where all assumed meanings and obvious truths have lost their power. A room without culture, knowledge or prejudices. They seem to be moving in a sea of ignorance with no connection with one another. How did we get here?

Essay by Daniel Birnbaum. From the catalogue "Maria Friberg" published by Galleri Charlotte Lund.

Artist

Maria Friberg was a Swedish artist who primarily worked with photography and videography. Her primary theme was masculinity, whereby she investigated the traditional male adopted roles and its properties which has through history been defined as "masculine". Since her breakthrough in the 1990s alongside other female photographers who were educated at Gothenburgs photography school, Friberg has offered his growing audience enigmatic, powerful, and imaginative staged images of men. They float tranquilly in pool water, are squeezed into cars, sometimes sleeping among white sheets, or only their lower halves are visible as they sit in suits at a table. She works with staged photography and often uses art historical references. Friberg likes to work in series, varying a motif across multiple works. Some of her most well-known series are "Still Lives" and "Almost There."

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5 000 SEK
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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

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