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The only artist in my family was my grandfather, who I
never met. He went mad during the Depression era and was
institutionalised. I think it would be fair to say that becoming or
being an artist didn’t have the right connotations in my family.
I grew up in the Oslo region in Norway. We had ready access to the sea,
forest and mountains and nature played a major part in my life. I did
love drawing and after graduating with biology as my major, I got
accepted into the only graphic design school at the time in Oslo. So, a
suitable compromise had been made, drawing and design with a purpose and
tangible outcome.
I was lucky enough to be attending the school during a time when they
had two wonderful British illustrators lecturing. They had a Laurel &
Hardy act going and my final portfolio was heavily weighted towards
illustration despite it being a minimal part of the school’s programme.
I lasted a year in the advertising industry after graduating and have
worked as a freelance illustrator since.
I have always had itchy feet and have never needed much of an excuse to
go travelling. I fell head over heels with an Australian on one of my
journeys and have lived in Australia, mostly in Melbourne, for the best
part of 13 years now. With family still in Norway I try to head over as
often as possible. I met a part of the Washington Green team on a side
trip to Birmingham and I am slowly coming around to thinking of myself
as an artist, sane or not!I feel so blessed having grown up with the sea
and the forest at my doorstep. I have had my most memorable moments out
in nature, but I have had this pull towards the city since my student
days in Oslo. Those long walks home in the middle of summer nights,
through empty city streets, were just as special.
There is inspiration in so many things; objects for their sculptural
shapes and what they represent, a line in a song or a quote, a fraction
of a video clip. I use objects as metaphors; the paintings are like
little narratives. I suppose they are a natural extension of
illustration. I act as my own client. Most of all they are about
emotions and the scenes are theatrical, like sets in an opera or a play.
I have always been interested in the power of visual symbols and how
they can convey such strong messages across cultures. At some level we
all seem to have the same visual library that is subconscious. And then
there are all the symbols that have been manufactured through history
and how they tell their own stories.
The use of colour is so important to create a mood. I would like my
paintings to have a timeless feel but I can see that they look
nostalgic. I try to use light to create a bit of drama and a dynamic
within the painting but I hope they have a bit of calm with a smile at
the end of the day.I try to have a strict plan and work to my own
deadlines but I find it hard until I have been through the process of
sorting out ideas and sketches. Once I have an initial sketch on paper I
hunt for reference material. When I have enough to support the idea I
work the sketch thoroughly, it has to stand on its own merit before I
start to paint.
I transfer the sketch to the canvas, just the general outlines, and
paint the first rough layer in an acrylic gouache. I work quite fast to
keep a flow in the picture and to beat the time since it dries fast. By
now I have generally made all the decisions and I can relax into
painting with oils, straight from the tubes in thicker strokes, blending
and fusing. I like to move between two pictures, and find that I lose
track of time. The final finishes are with thin washes to create a
cohesive calm.
It is such a joy to work with oils, the way it glides on and how easy it
is to manipulate. I have been precluded from using oils for so many
years, working to strict timelines, so I’m having a wonderful time these
days.My studio is my haven and stepping up the stairs with my foot
warmer Earnie the Schnauzer two strides ahead, signals the start of the
day, usually around 9 am. I fire up my computer and connect with the
world through my e-mail. After getting on top of messages and general
office work I’ll attack what is most urgent for the day. A good day is a
productive day with a tangible outcome so the sooner I get to sit down
and paint the better. Every day is different, it all depends on where in
the process I am, whether I’m working on ideas or get to sit down and
paint. I do like to sort out a series of sketches and line up a couple
of weeks of painting at a time with as few interruptions as possible. I
can get quit obsessive once I’m at this stage and only surface when I
really have to.
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