'For the insects and the hounds'. Collages, watercolors, graphite drawings, and architectural sculptures. All works evokes the tensions between man and nature, reality and fantasy which more broadly characterize the artist's practice.
David Zwirner is pleased to present an exhibition of new work by Swedish
artist Jockum Nordström, which marks his first solo show at the gallery
in London. This presentation follows the artist’s recent major European
survey, All I Have Learned and Forgotten Again, that was on view in 2013 at
Lille Métropole, musée d’art moderne, d’art contemporain et d’art brut in
Villeneuve d’Ascq, France, before it travelled to the Camden Arts Centre
in London, making it the first solo exhibition of his work in the city.
For the insects and the hounds brings together Nordström’s latest body of
work produced in a farmhouse studio on Gotland, an island located off the
southeastern coast of Sweden, greatly differing from his usual workspace
in Stockholm. The exhibition’s title insinuates these remote, rural
environs—Nordström has noted how insects would fall from the ceiling
onto the works below and that the family dog was his only disruption in the
studio—and further evokes the tensions between man and nature, reality
and fantasy which more broadly characterise the artist’s practice.
Delicately and elegantly constructed, Nordström’s collages, watercolours,
graphite drawings, and architectural sculptures feel improvisational and
often referred to by the artist as “stills,” where all the action takes place
simultaneously within a frozen frame. His imaginative tableaux-like
environments appear as fantastical settings populated with unique figures, animals, architecture, furniture, musical instruments,
and other props, all varying in scale and composition. Demonstrating his innovative approach to illustration and his distinctive
choice in subject matter, his works feature an assorted cast of characters, seemingly pulled from different eras, and frequently
employ unusual horizontal or vertical formats that recall the sequential arrangement of comic books and filmstrips.
The exhibition’s centerpieces will include three large-scale works on paper, each measuring over two metres in length, that
take inspiration from frescoes found in the numerous medieval churches on Gotland, most readily seen here with the floating
female figures encircled by rays of lights who the artist attributes to Gothic madonnas. The layered, heavily worked surfaces
of these watercolours convey Nordström’s meticulous, labour-intensive process, which begins by making paper cutouts
of figures and other objects with individualised, hand-drawn features—accumulating hundreds that are collected in piles
around the studio. Pulling from this vast stockpile, he arranges the cutouts, only settling on the final placement once charged
connotations are achieved between the characters and their settings. The ambiguous, hidden narratives imbue the works with
a sense of intrigue, which is furthered by enigmatic titles varying from colloquial expressions to poetic vignettes and streams
of consciousness, as exemplified by the graphite drawing When I met myself, depicting two men in antiquated dress within a
nondescript interior whose interaction remains unintelligible.
For the present exhibition, Nordström continues to fabricate sculptures from cardboard, matchboxes, and other found scraps
of paper, which have become increasingly important to his practice since he began showing them in the mid-2000s. The
artist considers his three-dimensional paper objects to be an extension of his two-dimensional drawings and collages. His
latest sculptures appear more abstract and formal than previous examples that were representational, directly referencing
architecture as small-scale models of modernist-looking buildings. With their square and rectangular formats resembling
picture frames, the new sculptures seem to stand as miniature abstract paintings and also operate as an innovative way for the
artist to further explore the physical qualities of paper and mark-making.
Image: When I met myself, 2014, Graphite on paper, 32 x 25 cm (12 / x 9 / inches)
Press Contact:
Jenny Lea +44 (0)20 3538 3165 jenny@davidzwirner.com
Opening: Thursday 27 November, 6 – 8 PM
David Zwirner
24 Grafton Street
Tuesday – Saturday, 10 AM – 6 PM
Monday by appointment