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The Atlantic Ocean

Art, Myths, Science


  • Skira (T&H)
  • expo: 26/4/2024 - 15/9/2024, Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Oslo
  • by Stefanie Hessler, Knut Ljogodt, Susanne Ostby Saether
The Atlantic Ocean. Art, Myths, Science presents around 150 artworks spanning from the 16th century and until today, which offers unique visions of the North Atlantic Ocean and of how its' cold, dark waters have shaped human practices, lives, and longings over centuries. Mirroring the flow of the oceans, the book highlights the coexistence of species, cultures, and stories.

ISBN 9788857252230 | EN | PB
€65,00
at this moment not in stock
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Publisher Skira (T&H)
ISBN 9788857252230
Author(s) Stefanie Hessler, Knut Ljogodt, Susanne Ostby Saether
Publication date September 2024
Edition Paperback
Dimensions 280 x 240 mm
Illustrations 140 col.ill.
Pages 160
Language(s) English ed.
Exhibition Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Oslo
Description

The fascination of the ocean through 150 artworks from 16th century to the present.

The Atlantic Ocean. Art, Myths, Science presents around 150 artworks spanning from the 16th century and until today, which offers unique visions of the North Atlantic Ocean and of how its' cold, dark waters have shaped human practices, lives, and longings over centuries. Mirroring the flow of the oceans, the book highlights the coexistence of species, cultures, and stories.

Romantic paintings of stormy seas or shipwrecks by artists such as J.M.W. Turner, Peder Balke, J C Dahl, and John Constable, whose work has influenced the collective imagination, are interspersed with more modern outlooks, including vitalist bathing scenes by Edvard Munch and Anna-Eva Bergman's abstract geometric compositions of the coastal landscapes of Northern Norway.

Vintage maps from late 1500-1700s that combines accurately drawn coastlines with fantastical creatures, are interlaced with contemporary works, including Allan Sekula's seminal photographic documentation of globalized trade and precarious labor at sea in Fish Story (1988-95) and video installations by artists such as Sondra Perry and Joar Nango, the latter featuring a projection screen constructed of halibut stomachs; the artist's contemporary interpretation of the older Sea-Sámi practice of constructing windows of this material.