Aslaug M. Juliussen: Intersections
By (Author) Charis Gullickson
Edited by Nordnorsk Kunstmuseum
Arnoldsche
Arnoldsche
1st February 2019
Germany
General
Non Fiction
709.2
Hardback
112
Width 270mm, Height 210mm
640g
Aslaug Magdalena Juliussen began her career in art by immersing herself in an ancient crafts medium. Born in 1953, she studied art in Oslo and afterwards wove wall hangings at the workshop of the textile artist Synnve Anker Aurdal. There Aslaug Magdalena Juliussen arrived at reflections on tradition and on the natural environment in the context of art that would prove productive for her future work.
Living in a Smi family circle, the artist was soon working with traditional materials, translating reindeer hides and bones into abstract configurations: spheres covered in hides and pierced with antlers, wall hangings shot through with delicate bones and exquisite flowers formed of cloth, earmarks and glass. Juliussen succeeds brilliantly in weaving what might at first seem anachronistic-looking combinations of materials into powerfully expressive works of art to develop a distinctive aesthetic. As an artist she creates communication spaces between tradition and present, here and there, us and those perceived as other.
Apart from a lavish spread of illustrations, this publication includes brief interdisciplinary essays that shed light on Juliussen's work from many angles biology, philosophy, gender studies and art history thus making possible an engrossingly profound dialogue on art in the context of a European indigenous culture.
Charis Gullickson, MA, The Arctic University of Norway, is a curator at Nordnorsk Kunstmuseum, Tromso. She specialises in contemporary art from the circumpolar north and has curated several exhibitions on Sami art and craft with accompanying publications, among others, I Craft, I Travel Light (2017), Sami Stories (2014), Tech-Stiles (2012) and Iver Jaks (2010).