Craphica Creativa 2019 – Hereafter

Graphica Creativa 2019 - Hereafter features works from invited art universities in four major cities: Helsinki, Oslo, Tokyo and Alberta. The main focus is on printmaking students who present projects on themes important to them, accompanied by works by professors and teachers of printmaking.

IN A STATE OF FLUX: WHAT NOW? WHERE ARE WE?

Uncertainty and instability, as a starting point, is a challenging position to be in. The state of the world mirrors the theme Flux: What now? Where are we? and has been a departure point for thinking about resources, materials, waste, climate change, and the structures of the natural world. As a group, we see our collective works as dynamic and interacting with one another, bound by references of earth and its byproducts. As individuals and as artists, we investigate change and are involved in it.

We consider directions in printmaking and our agency in the reproduction of the world’s realities. In the process of making our individual works, much is based on sight, observation, and materials. Emilia Tanner’s laser cut works explore the creation of art through light and sight: from light generated by a laser, to computer screens and digital devices, and the human eye while viewing. She reminds us of the many transformations and processes imagery undergoes before it reaches the viewer’s eyes. Through a window of a boat, Linda Ciesielski, observes the ice changing. A sea of patterns in the Baltic opens up questions of uncertainty and perception: ice as land, and land turning into water. She wonders how to comprehend nature during times of rapid change, and see local phenomena as a shared global experience. While walking her dogs in the forest, Aura Kotkavirta discovers an unexpectedly large hill illuminated by spring light, but covered in black sand, strange bushes, and a sheen of purple. Her dogs wonder why they cannot drink the water from the nearby puddles. She listens to the birds filling the forest with song, struck by the romantic surrealness of this foreign site: a mountain of displaced urban snow, melting.

Emma Peura and Maria Erikson think with their hands and about materials that surround them: water and paper. Emma Peura holds a stack of paper she made from industrial hemp and cotton, and is drawn into thoughts of freshwater, both of Finland’s abundance – a privilege – and of the world’s limited supply. To Emma, the printmaking process gives her time to think with her hands. By interacting with materials, she gains insights on her life and the world around her. In Maria Erikson’s work, she explores water and handmade paper in the context of materiality and time. Seeking to reconsider the subject and object in printmaking, she explores transformations of material through wear and contact, the process of art-making, and the ephemeral nature of material itself. 

One material that is not ephemeral in nature is plastic. Annele Lahti thinks about the abundance and persistence of plastic in our lives and the environment: a convenient, flexible material with high-costs for the planet. Annele questions how waste is handled, and thinks about her own contributions of making waste in the process of making art, seeking to work as ecologically as possible.

Together, we are in flux. We find ourselves as individuals considering transformation and change at an observed level and at a larger one: how to comprehend issues at scales beyond the individual, but rooted in individual choices and cumulative impacts? Does the artist represent these issues, educate themselves and others through doing and showing, or deal with them directly through their own life-practice? Printmaking is about reproduction, representation and resources. We are participating in change, observing it, and seeking to bring new perspectives to it.

Linda Ciesielski, Maria Erikson, Annele Lahti, Aura Kotkavirta, Emma Peura, Emilia Tanner