Interview with Lotte Fløe Christensen

SA: Nature is a recurrent theme in your work. What sort of relationship do you have with  nature – is it unproblematic or is it a fearful and ambiguous one?

LFC: I do not see nature as a theme in my practise, but more as a tool I can use to investigate questions of meaning and fragility. Having grown up in the countryside my relationship to nature is fundamentally connected to a feeling of home. For me nature is evident; is not something that is in opposition to something urban or civilized, it is simply there. The world. When that is said nature, to me, also represents feelings of loss, longing and uncertainty and is thereby something I have an ambivalent relationship to. This might be the reason for nature having such a presence in my work.

SA: Would you describe your art as romantic?

LFC: In the sense that Romanticism in some aspects deals with an individual search for meaning in a world where meaning is not given, my work can certainly be seen as Romantic. I am very interested in the search for understanding and meaning that seems to be a deeply rooted human drive.

SA: Nature seems to be a popular subject in art right now. Have you had any thoughts about this, and if yes – what do they look like?

LFC: Artists have always dealt – and worked with nature, but it might be true that there has been an increase in nature-related work over recent years. I have previously not really considered this fact. Maybe because I find it quite natural that nature is present in contemporary art. I think that because the technologies, we surround ourselves with, have developed much faster than our brains, we are often stressed and feel detached and alienated towards the lives we live. I have read quite a lot of research dealing with nature’s healing and calming affect on people. I think that nature is somehow connected to something meaningful and is therefore a great tool to talk about meaning. This might be one of the reasons why artists increasingly deal with nature.

SA: In your work photographs get mixed up with objects. You pull branches and leaves out of the photographs and place them in new, three-dimensional formations. What happens in these encounters and why haven’t you decided to work with either photography or sculpture/installations?

LFC: I am not sure I can explain what happens in the space between the photographs and the objects/installations. But something happens. I see my work as examinations of different issues of creation of meaning. To approach these quite abstract issues I have in recent years felt the need to step outside the two-dimensionality of the photographs; to use more examination-methods to get closer to the subject. I think somehow the objects and the photographs are doing the same thing in different ways.

SA: What inspires you?

LFC: Literature inspires me. And books as objects. Conversations with people. Random research I come across. Exhibitions. Thoughts of material. The gap between two images. Maybe nature.

SA: You’re interested in the manifestations and acts that come out of the search for meaning. Are you never tempted to reach a target; to find a final answer? Is it possible? And what would happen in this case?

LFC: I do not think there is a definitive answer. So luckily the search can continue.

SA: What are you exhibiting at Nextart Gallery?

LFC: The exhibition consists of photographs and small resin sculptures on podiums. The photographs deal with the idea of support and fragility, signs and action and corresponds with the cubes of resin holding semi-cast twigs and paper.

 

 






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Lotte Fløe Christensen. Notes on Things of Great Importance,
13 oct. — 4 nov.






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A selection of our books.

Steidl, Mack, Walter König, JRP Ringier, Hatje Cantz, Prestel,
Thames & Hudson, B-B-B-BOOKS and Kehrer.






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Book Signing Event,  7- 9 pm, 2 November, 2012.

Mårten Lange, “Another Language”.

96 pages
59 tritone plates
14 cm x 21 cm
Embossed hardcover

Publication date: October 2012

Mack Books, London






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“Sraunus”, Curated by Paul Paper, 7- 10 pm, 7 November, 2012.

“Sraunus” is a travelling one-evening projection of contemporary photography. After being launched in Vilnius and Marijampole, Lithuania in 2010, it was showed at Steinsland Berliner gallery in Stockholm, BYOB event in Vancouver, Nofound photofair in Paris and Awa Gallery in Amsterdam.

Participating artists:

Thomas Albdorf, Aurélien Arbet, Flemming Ove Bech, Alexander Binder, Lucas Blalock, Billy Buck, Maryanne Casasanta, Grant Cornett, Elspeth Diederix, Bobby Doherty, Bryan Dooley, Jessica Eaton, Jérémie Egry, Thobias Fäldt, Philip Gaißer, Nicholas Gottlund, Paul Herbst, Go Itami, Klara Källström, Jennilee Marigomen, Max Marshall & Andrea P. Nguyen, Sylvain-Emmanuel P, Paul Paper, Facundo Pires, Nicolas Poillot, Nerijus Rimkus, Johan Rosenmunthe, Jaap Scheeren, Maurice Scheltens & Liesbeth Abbenes, Adam Schreiber, Brea Souders, Kate Steciw, Ugnė Straigytė, Kimm Whiskie, Jessica Williams, Ann Woo

 






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“Notes on Things of Great Importance”-Lotte Fløe Christensen
with support from:






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Press Release

“Notes on Things of Great Importance”- Lotte Fløe Christensen
Nextart Gallery & Bookshop
Opening October 12, 2012, 7-10 pm
Exhibition runs until November 4

 Notes on Things of Great Importance.

How am I interested in meaning? I am interested in expressions in the search for meaning. The endeavor and the investigation; the experiment can be seen as rooms, where the action is directed towards sensemaking. You don’t know what your are looking for, what may occur, don’t know anything about the result. Nevertheless the actions are meaningful. Lotte Fløe Christensen

In the photographs and sculptures by Lotte Fløe Christensen, the continuous search for a meaning is a crucial ingredient. The triggering motive is not the final answer that the investigation could lead to, but rather the deconstruction in the act itself. Sticks, leaves and tree trunks form linguistic combinations, possible signs, which coexist in a never-ending stream of constructions.

In Notes on Things of Great Importance, which is shown at Nextart Gallery, the artist presents a collection of newly produced works created exclusively for this occasion. The collection consists of both photography and sculptural objects – the latter made of plastic. The nature exists inside the frames, but broadens and extends as often out in the room to form physical objects. A whole, that simultaneously reminds us of life’s limitations and fragility. The exhibition also presents “Construct” and “Still Life (Support)”, two photograps that appeared earlier this spring at the graduation exhibition of the Master Students in photography at Valand Academy . In these the interaction between nature and constructions made by human hand is depicted in a humorous and perceptive manner.

Lotte Fløe Christensen (born 1979, Denmark) graduated from the School of Photography, Gothenburg, spring 2012. Her work has previously been shown in group exhibitions as well as solo exhibitions, in cities like Vienna, Arles, Toronto, Århus and Glasgow. Earlier this year, she participated in Anagram at Fotografins Hus in Stockholm and Paper Match in Copenhagen.

Welcome!

For more information and press images please contact
Sara Arvidsson on +46 (0)70  940 81 18 or sara@nextart.se






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Max Ronnersjö, #nofilter

10 oktober 2012 kl. 19-22

Instagram is a free photo-sharing program and social network that was launched in October 2010. The service enables users to take a photo, apply a digital filter to it, and then share it with other Instagram users they are connected to on the social network as well as on a variety of social networking services. Instagram currently has about 100 million registered users. A distinctive feature is that it confines photos to a square shape, similar to Kodak Instamatic and Polaroid images, in contrast to the 4:3 aspect ratio typically used by mobile device cameras. The digital filters and effects that can be used is often connected to outdated and nostalgic looks of photos, also imitating the look of Polaroid pictures. The user is also able to tag the shared photos with hashtags. Hashtags are words or phrases prefixed with the symbol #, a form of metadata tag, a way to categorize and connect each photo to other photos with the same tag. A hashtag that is often used when the user do not apply a filter is #nofilter, meaning that the photo is not edited before shared.






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Hans Hemmert, “Thought Bubble” (Exhibition Closed by DHL)

 

Photo: AnnaCarin Isaksson






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With support by Gothenburg Culture Board.
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