Turning and Returning
LocationT293, Rome
DateMay 23 - July 14, 2012
In 2010 Henrik Olai Kaarstein spent the summer cleaning two different dead women’s houses, putting stuff in huge containers parked in the driveway. The dreadful work was made bearable for him by virtue of the beautiful objects he discovered in each home. He was mostly drawn to the fabrics, towels, bed sheets, carpets and tablecloths in bleached pastel colors and flower prints. Some were traditional Norwegian quilts from the late 1800s, some post-war mail order and other modern day IKEA.
After the summer, Kaarstein started on his own textile collection, pushed by the curiosity of exploring the idea of a “fresh” towel or sheet presented at hotels: his aim was to remove the fabrics from their bodily function and the continuation in their use. Instead of becoming new again, they were frozen with glue and doomed to perform for the viewer as an aesthetic object.
Most of the fabrics that constitute the works exhibited are found/stolen/borrowed (from hotels, bars, saunas, friends, or garbage). Together with these fabrics are small traces of “business lifestyle” objects, hotel soaps and slippers in particular, all gathered from nights at high class hotels; hotels recommended by (straight male) yuppie magazines where the artist went to soak up the atmosphere, pretending to be a part of it, dressing up and being overly polite and talkative with the staff (‘A very expensive artistic research’).
The construction process is very important to the work. After he has collected the material and surface, choices are made quickly with a precise hand. Everything is mixed together and then left to dry and develop for days. The bed frame pieces work around both woodcut prints of interiors and cardboard packaging from home supplies, where the object’s use and look is photographed and illustrated in a dreamlike, but very direct manner.
Henrik Olai Kaarstein was born in Oslo in 1989, he is currently studying at Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste Städelschule, Frankfurt. ‘Turning and Returning’ is his first show at T293.
After the summer, Kaarstein started on his own textile collection, pushed by the curiosity of exploring the idea of a “fresh” towel or sheet presented at hotels: his aim was to remove the fabrics from their bodily function and the continuation in their use. Instead of becoming new again, they were frozen with glue and doomed to perform for the viewer as an aesthetic object.
Most of the fabrics that constitute the works exhibited are found/stolen/borrowed (from hotels, bars, saunas, friends, or garbage). Together with these fabrics are small traces of “business lifestyle” objects, hotel soaps and slippers in particular, all gathered from nights at high class hotels; hotels recommended by (straight male) yuppie magazines where the artist went to soak up the atmosphere, pretending to be a part of it, dressing up and being overly polite and talkative with the staff (‘A very expensive artistic research’).
The construction process is very important to the work. After he has collected the material and surface, choices are made quickly with a precise hand. Everything is mixed together and then left to dry and develop for days. The bed frame pieces work around both woodcut prints of interiors and cardboard packaging from home supplies, where the object’s use and look is photographed and illustrated in a dreamlike, but very direct manner.
Henrik Olai Kaarstein was born in Oslo in 1989, he is currently studying at Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste Städelschule, Frankfurt. ‘Turning and Returning’ is his first show at T293.