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Fredrik Vaerslev

(Norge, Född 1979)
Utropspris
100 000 - 120 000 SEK
8 830 - 10 600 EUR
9 110 - 10 900 USD
Klubbat pris
100 000 SEK
Omfattas av följerätt

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Köpinformation
Bildrättigheter

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För konditionsrapport kontakta specialist
Louise Wrede
Stockholm
Louise Wrede
Specialist samtida konst, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Fredrik Vaerslev
(Norge, Född 1979)

Utan titel

Duk 205 x 120 cm.

Proveniens

Gió Marconi, Milano.
Privat samling, Stockholm.

Utställningar

Lumiar Cité, Lissabon, "Hey Aunt Maggie! I wanna become a painter! - Well, you can start with painting the fence!", 23 januari - 2 mars 2014.

Övrig information

Text from the press release at Luminar Cité, Lisbon.

"As a painter, Fredrik Værslev works in an idiosyncratic way regarding the choice of the 'motifs', the support and the actual presentation of the works. His concept of painting includes not only the use of traditional canvas, but also painted wooden structures, which, being part of the painting, result in an unusual three-dimensionality.
In Lisbon, Fredrik Værslev appropriates, in a multiple way, the logo of Lumiar Cité gallery, which emerges as a central symbol in each of the eight large-format canvases. This series of paintings is installed in an unexpected way, emphasizing the objectness of the support of the paintings in dialogue with another series of works: the wooden fence pieces constructed and painted by the artist installed at a distance on the flat sides of the galleryʼs columns.
A set of associations, articulated by the artist and derived from his autobiographical references – which are not revealed to the public – unfold by creating a mental space between painting understood as a medium whose projected aura suggests independence and freedom in their multiple interpretations and the eternal search by the public for the utility of art. Ironically, this search does not come out defrauded: the ʻfencesʼ are transformed into ʻcoat racksʼ for hanging shirts designed by the tailor Per Christian Brath, who used a fabric that is normally used by art shippers to wrap up paintings."