STAVANGER.- In the largest and most significant presentation to date of Vanessa Bairds artistic universe, the acclaimed Norwegian artist is taking over all of
Kunsthall Stavangers galleries.
The exhibition comprises six galleries filled with Bairds works, from intimate self portraits to large-scale room installations. Most of the works were produced during 2019-2021, and are shown here for the first time. Also on view are a selection of works by artists that are close to Baird: Her mother, Maureen Baird, and her long-time collaborator Mette Hellenes.
Kunsthall Stavanger is proud to present this substantial exhibition by Vanessa Baird, who is one of Norways most important contemporary artists, says Kunsthall Stavangers Director Hanne Mugaas.
In the exhibition, Baird puts the spotlight on the ongoing coronavirus pandemic that has affected us all. Through her personal experiences, visitors will be able to reflect on the collective ordeal of living through the pandemic. In particular, Baird explores how women have once again been put in the position as full-time caregivers.
Bairds works are both highly provocative and emphatically individual. Through her unique voice, the artist captures something that is specifically Norwegian and decidedly grounded in her own visual culture, although her political and feminist engagement travels easily across borders.
FEATURED ARTWORKS
Behind the picket fence / Ill be pushing up the daisies (202021) is an extensive series of large-scale watercolours displayed in Kunsthall Stavangers main gallery, where Baird provides us with near-daily updates of her life at home during the pandemic-mandated isolation. Through vivid images of herself and her family, Baird captures the states of exhaustion, boredom and frustration that accompany the everyday tasks of looking after a household, conjuring up the chaotic detritus of domestic life in a kaleidoscope of provocatively raw imagery.
A little red coat, a pair of beautiful blue trousers and a green umbrella lost at sea (2020) comprises fourteen large-scale watercolours on rolls of paper, four metres high and seventeen metres long. Whilst Bairds work is rooted in the autobiographical, here her scope widens: disturbing scenes of figures drowning in the waves might be informed by Norwegian folklore, pervaded by legends of the sea, as well as referencing international political issues such as the European refugee crisis.
Red Herring Prednisolon ciclosporin (201418) is a series of intimate self-portraits in watercolour, made over a period of four years whilst the artist was being treated for a chronic illness. These works beautifully communicate the extreme physical and emotional effects the medication had on her: her bloated face and bleary eyes, expressing anguish and pain, stare out at us from her fiercely red face, whilst in another portrait, bleached of colour, her features ebb away into a kind of miasma.
Works by Bairds long-time collaborator, Mette Hellenes, is on view in a dedicated gallery. The works are cut-out pages from her diary, describing the dullness of her life during the pandemic. On view are also several collaborative works by Baird and Hellenes, among them the two videos You bad animal! Cant you leave me alone just for one minute! and I see an angel. I think its you (both 2004). In these distorted self portraits of the good friends and collaborators, the artists explore decay and discomfort, an approach we can recognize from both Baird's and Hellenes' practices.
Upon entering Kunsthall Stavanger, you will find furniture decorated by Bairds mother Maureen Baird, who is also an artist. The furniture is in daily use at Vanessa and Maureens shared home. Maureens imagery includes feminist perspectives and figures in a visual idiom that clearly brings to mind her daughters art.
Vanessa Baird (b. 1963) lives and works in Oslo. She studied at the Norwegian National Academy of Craft and Art Industry in Oslo 198285, the Royal College of Art in London 198587, and the Norwegian National Academy of Fine Arts in Oslo 198891. Her work is rife with dark, haunting allusions that often evoke fables. Bairds intense, meticulous drawings typically take the personal and the domestic as a starting point and usually also comment on contemporary political and social situations.
In 2015 Baird won the prestigious Lorck Schive Kunstpris, one of the premier art awards for artists living and working in Norway. She has also collaborated with the critically acclaimed author Karl Ove Knausgård and illustrated his novel Om høsten (Autumn, 2015). In 2017, Baird opened her solo exhibition You are something else at Kunstnernes Hus. The exhibition was lauded by critics and curators alike as a standout event in recent Norwegian art history.
Baird has recently exhibited at Drawing Room in London (2021), the Kochi-Muziris Biennale in India (2019), KODE in Bergen (201819), OSL contemporary (2018), and Kunstnernes Hus (2017) in Oslo.