"Man som faller i floden just när solen gått upp"
Signed US. Canvas 206 x 205 cm.
Acquired directly from the artist.
Sivert Oldenvi Collection
Moderna Museet, Stockholm, "Ulrik Samuelson", 5 December 1998 - 7 February 1999.
Cecilia Widenheim och Ulrik Samuelson, Moderna museet, "Ulrik Samuelson - Second hand", 1998, p. 204.
Mårten Castenfors, "Sveriges konst 1900-talet, part 3, 1970-2000", 2001, p. 52.
Mårten Castenfors writes:
"Of the three (Björn Lövin, Sivert Lindblom, and Ulrik Samuelson, eds. note), Ulrik Samuelson stands out through a passionate and erotic relationship with subject matter and materials. Samuelson's works are like unabashed orgies in glossy black and silky pink, in water lilies and the marbled elegance from which they originate, with a scent of hay and a mirror-like iron-rich Swedish lake. [...].
During the 1990s Samuelson returned to easel painting, at a time when painting as a form of expression was dismissed by a younger postmodern generation. With exhibitions like 'Blick stilla' in 1993 and 'Enskild väg' in 1996 at Galerie Aronowitsch, Samuelson cleverly emphasized the rich potential of expressive landscape painting. However, it was not ordinary landscape painting that was presented, but rather a more conceptual version where the subjects were either enticingly abstract or lush through a murky asphalt-brown tone, reminiscent of the confined salon painting of the 19th century. At the same time, these paintings engaged in an intense dialogue with Swedish and international art history; in his works, Samuelson spoke as warmly and directly with Kasimir Malevich as with Edvard Munch, Prince Eugen, and Bruno Liljefors. While subtly commenting on the contemporary art debate from his position slightly outside the art world, Samuelson also introduced ambiguous texts in his works, akin to his painter colleague Torsten Andersson. With these contrasting verses, Samuelson achieved further tension in the works, effectively breaking the stillness that seemed to prevail in nature and transitioning into a compelling mental activity. Samuelson's paintings, like his installations, were both cryptic and captivating - constantly inviting visual and intellectual contemplation." (Mårten Castenfors, "Swedish Art of the 20th Century, Part 3, 1970-2000", 2001, pages 49-52).