Gunnar S. Gundersen
By (Author) Jan Kokkin
Arnoldsche
Arnoldsche
1st September 2020
Germany
General
Non Fiction
History of art
Paintings and painting
700.92
Hardback
256
Width 241mm, Height 292mm
1720g
Presented in English and Norwegian, this is the first comprehensive publication on the artist Gunnar Gundersen (19211983), one of the most significant Norwegian artists of the post-war period.
Together with several other artists, Gunnar Gundersen signified the dawn of modernism. In 1947 he began abstract painting, developing his work until around 1960, when he found a completely non-figurative form inspired by technological developments and cosmic visions. He is thus considered to be one of the few groundbreaking proponents of Concrete Art in Scandinavia, alongside Richard Mortensen in Denmark and Olle Brtling in Sweden. Gundersen was a man who lived his life intensely to the point of his own self-destruction. It was with this self-same vigour that he applied colour to his can-vases: ring-shaped and wavy structures in bold reds or shimmering shades of grey that open up the picture to the viewer. In them not only impressions of the Norwegian landscape but also the eruptive power of human encounters seem to be reflected. Besides his numerous paintings, Gundersen also devoted himself to extensive murals and interior designs, which ultimately went on to form an important part of his oeuvre.
Jan Kokkin, MA, University of Oslo, is former director of Kunst p Arbeidsplassen and art critic for the Norwegian newspapers Dagens Nringsliv and Morgenbladet. He has published biographies and books on several Norwegian nineteenth-century artists and is currently working as freelance curator, author and lecturer.