2022-04-28 11:00Press release

Press release: Peter Linde Busk and Numen/For Use at Wanås Konst

Installation, Tape, Paris, 2015, by the design collective Numen /For Use at Palais de Tokyo, Paris.Artist: Numen/For Use, Title: Tape Paris, Year: 2015. Installation by the design collective Numen /For Use at Palais de Tokyo, Paris.

A sculpture to enter and a spatial design to be surrounded by – this year’s art projects at Wanås Konst invite the viewer in and embrace material experimentation as part of how we work toward new sustainable solutions. The installation Tape Wanås, by industrial design collective Numen/For Use, fills a 50-meter (165-foot) barn and reaches outside. Danish artist Peter Linde Busk presents his first outdoor sculpture after having worked on materials and techniques for almost two years in an effort to create sustainable alternatives for the new artwork. In addition, Wanås Konst is putting a special focus on the collection in the sculpture park, emphasizing Anne Thulin’s façade painting created in 1994, as well as Yoko Ono’s Skyladder and text-based work Imagine Peace. The exhibitions are opening Saturday, May 7.

Press opening: Thursday, May 5, 2022, noon. Light lunch and introduction followed by a tour led by artistic director Elisabeth Millqvist along with Peter Linde Busk & Numen/For Use.

RSVP: Contact PR manager in charge of exhibitions Sofia Bertilsson at sofia@wanaskonst.se or by phone at +46 733 86 68 20 by 1pm May 2, 2022.

Art Projects Drive Change and Material Development
This year’s major art projects highlight artists that drive change and material development. Rather than raise our awareness about issues of the environment and sustainability as motifs, Danish artist Peter Linde Busk and design group Numen/For Use search for sustainable alternatives in the making of their work. Wanås Konst presents Peter Linde Busk’s first outdoor sculpture. It’s a work with an outside and an inside, the shape is inspired by a pumpkin and the rituals associated with Halloween. The magical and fantastical interested Linde Busk, but in his version, the pumpkin becomes a white sculpture titled Solaris, 4 meters (13 feet) in diameter, that can be viewed as a sculpture or a space to be entered. The newly produced work is shown along with an exhibition of his paintings, reliefs, prints, sculptures and collage from 2015 on, giving insight into his multifaceted oeuvre.

 

Artistic Director Elisabeth Millqvist:
In this year’s art project, the artists seek sustainable alternatives in the manifestations of their work; they test, retry, and experiment. New materials lead to new questions, but it is a basic part of examining alternatives and the result of not being satisfied with the status quo.

Material development is a central element of Linde Busk’s practice and using varying processes and media along with the desire to constantly learn new things are the driving forces when he approaches new artworks. For almost two years, he has produced recipes, materials, and techniques to make the large-scale sculpture in pulp, an effort combined with ever-present artistic questions. He has rejected traditional materials such as bronze and the typical substitutions, fiberglass, or epoxy materials such as resin, as these ages poorly and present all the environmental problems of plastic. The intricate surface of the sculpture is recognizable from his other artworks; he often blends figuration with the abstract, and frequently we see one or several characters in the center of a detailed, ornate background. Parts of previous works and leftover materials are often reused, finding their way into new artworks as parts of a relief or fantastic mosaics composed of unique pieces in a perpetually ongoing cycle.

Numen/For Use is an industrial design collective established by Nikola Radeljkovic, Sven Jonke, and Christoph Katzler in 1998. The group has actively worked to erase the barriers between design, architecture, and scenography, and describe their work as a playground for testing ideas in relation to various tasks. At the request of a choreographer, they created an installation of tape that documented and related to dancers’ movements in 2008. Since then, they have continued experimenting with tape, rope, and nets in elaborate forms and spatial constellations. The site-specific installation Tape Wanås, at Wanås Konst, was not constructed digitally in advance but was created on site in an analog and a physical process. The sprawling tape lines in the barn from the 1700s, show different stages of the undertaking. One part of the installation forms a tunnel to crawl through, and another place features an opening to look up through. The installation examines the old, cathedral-like building as it continues through the space and outward through an open hatch, and affixed to tree branches outside, creates a portal that can be walked beneath. Visitors are invited in the cavities of the hovering large structure, which opens for discoveries for both mind and body.

Parallel to a fascination with the possibilities of the material, the group began working to find a sustainable replacement for conventional tape, and over a ten-year period, they have been investigating the production of alternatives. Step by step, and in close dialogue with a manufacturer, they have developed a biodegradable version of tape. The installation at Wanås Konst, is the second one created with this new material. The first was at the Garage Museum in Moscow in 2019 as a part of the exhibition The Coming World: Ecology as the New Politics 2030-2100.

Exhibitions: Peter Linde Busk and Numen/For Use
Exhibition Period: May 7 – September 4, 2022. (Linde Busk’s outdoor work will also be on view during the fall 2022 season.)
Opening: May 7, 10am – 5pm. Opening ceremony 1pm by museum directors Mattias Givell and Elisabeth Millqvist.

 Focus on the Collection
In 2022, visitors to Wanås Konst get to see more by two much appreciated artists in the collection. Since 2010, playful red balls have brightened up the beech trees in the sculpture park in Anne Thulin’s artwork Double Dribble. Now, we re-install her work from 1994, Ultra Marin, a monochromatic blue painting on a façade of a historic building, which both merges with and contrasts against its surroundings. Yoko Ono’s Wish Trees for Wanå with instructions, 14 apple trees, and over 10,000 wishes harvested yearly – became a central part of the collection in connection with her exhibition in 2011. This year, her second work that is part of the collection, Skyladder, is also on view. Furthermore, Ono is making a specific addition connected to the ongoing war in Ukraine. the text work Imagine Peace is exhibited in the facilities as a continuation of her life-long effort to promote peace. 

Wanås Konst Live Art
In June and Jul
y, Joanna Kotze performs as part of her research before returning in 2023 as guest curator of dance. Joanna Kotze has a long and esteemed dance career. Between January – December 2021, she created LONG DISTANCE DANCE DIALOGUES, a series of exchanges between herself and 12 dancers and choreographers around the world. The guest curator of the Live Art program is selected by Wanås Konst’s collaborative partner Rachel Tess and her residency program MARC as a way of continuing the active effort to support live art in the program initiated in 2014. More information will be available later in the spring. Dates: June 18, 25 and July 2, 2022.

About the artists
Peter Linde Busk (b. 1973, Copenhagen) was trained at the Slade School of Fine Art, London; Hunter College of Art, New York; Royal Art Academy, London, and the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. Previously based in Berlin, he moved his studio to Denmark in 2018. There, he was awarded The New Carlsberg Art Award in 2020. In 2021, he had an artist residency in Pietrasanta in Italy. In Sweden, he has previously exhibited at Borås Art Museum in 2017.

Numen/For Use is a group of industrial designers who began working in Croatia in the 1990s. Today, it is based in Vienna and Zagreb and consists of Sven Jonke, Christioph Katzler and Nikola Radeljkovic. At the turn of the millennium, the members began working experimentally with theater and choreography, and over time, they began exhibiting intricate installations of rope and tape that visitors can participate in physically by entering and climbing on them. Some of their many artistic projects include Palais de Tokyo (2014) and the architecture biennale in Venice the same year. In Sweden, an installation was shown at Färgfabriken, Stockholm, 2012, and in 2013, they did a project for Open Art Örebro. numen.eu @numenforuse

Joanna Kotze was born in South Africa and is based in Brooklyn, NY, where she has been a part of the dance scene since 1998. Her new evening-length dance performance, ‘lectric Eye, and her short film, Nothing’s Changed Except for Everything, premiered in February. Her choreography has been presented at New York Live Arts, Baryshnikov Arts Center, Danspace Project, The Space at Irondale, The Wexner Center, National Arts Centre Ottawa, Velocity Dance Center, The Yard, Bates Dance Festival, Jacob’s Pillow, American Dance Institute, and Movement Research at the Judson Church, among others. joannakotze.com @jrkotze

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For further information, please contact:
Sofia Bertilsson
PR & Media Relations Exhibitions
sofia@wanaskonst.se
Tel +46 (0)733 866820
Pressroom: https://press.wanaskonst.se

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Wanås Konst – Stiftelsen Wanås Utställningar/The Wanås Art Foundation 
Wanås, SE-289 90 Knislinge
 https://www.wanaskonst.se/en-us/
Pressrum:  https://press.wanaskonst.se (här finns bilder för nedladdning)

Visit Wanås 
Wanås Konst – Stiftelsen Wanås Utställningar/The Wanås Art Foundation 
Wanås, SE-289 90 Knislinge, Sweden
https://www.wanaskonst.se/en-us/
Pressrum:  https://press.wanaskonst.se (download press material and images with credits)

Visit Wanås 
Wanås Konst Sculpture Park with collection open year-round, daily 10am – 5pm.
Wanås Konst, Shop & Deli, Café open hours 2022: 
Mar. 5 – May 1, Sat-Sun 10am – 4pm*
May 7 – Oct. 2, daily 10am – 5pm**
Oct 6 – Nov 6, Thurs-Sun 11am – 4pm***
*Easter Break Hours: April 11 – 18, daily 10am – 4pm
**Midsummer Eve: June 24, closed
***Fall Break: also Oct. 31– Nov. 2 

 


About Wanås Konst

Wanås Art - Center for Art and Learning, produces and communicates art that challenges and changes the view of society, outdoors in the landscape around Wanås in Skåne. In addition to the permanent collection, extensive temporary exhibitions are shown outdoors and indoors, with accompanying programs with screenings, artist talks and workshops for a wide audience. Wanås Art produces site-specific international contemporary art and learning with innovation and accessibility for all as keywords. In the sculpture park and the permanent collection, there are about 70 site-specific works in the landscape that were created especially for Wanås Art by artists such as Igshaan Adams, Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg, William Forsythe, Ann Hamilton, Jenny Holzer, Yoko Ono, and Ann-Sofi Sidén etc. Since 1987, more than 300 artists have participated in exhibitions. The sculpture park covers 40 hectares and is explored on foot. Wanås Konst is run by the independent non-profit Foundation Wanås Utställningar created in 1994. Marika Wachtmeister founded the business in 1987 and led it until 2010. Since 2011, the business is led by the management duo Elisabeth Millqvist and Mattias Givell. The operation is financed through support from Östra Göinge municipality, Region Skåne, state support own revenues and private funds and sponsorship. Wanås Konst is a member of the European Land + Art Network (ELAN). Wanås is a place in the world where art, nature and history meet. Wanås Art, Wanås Restaurant Hotel and Wanås Gods AB operate at Wanås and there is also a medieval castle. Wanås is located in Östra Göinge municipality in northeastern Skåne 1.5 hours from Malmö / Copenhagen. For more info please see www.wanas.se