VÅGA

1 June – 31 August 2019 | ÖNNINGEBYMUSEET, Åland & 1 – 18 November 2017 | Arthouse Gallery, Sydney

CATALOGUE    FEATURED WORKS   VIDEO    MEDIA   PRESS RELEASE  


CATALOGUE


FEATURED WORKS


Ensemble, 2017
Oil on linen
13 x 60 inches
36 x 152 cm 


Esperence, 2017
Oil on linen
60 x 72 inches
153 x 183 cm


Eternal I, 2017
Oil on linen
48 x 28 inches
122 x 62 cm


Eternal II, 2017
Oil on linen
48 x 28 inches
122 x 62 cm


Fortitude I, 2017
Oil on linen
48 x 48 inches
122 x 122 cm


Fortitude II, 2017
Oil on linen
48 x 48 inches
122 x 122 cm


Infinite Possession, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 78 inches
92 x 198 cm 


Invisible Boundaries, 2017
Oil on linen
48 x 144 inches
122 x 366 cm 


Lost in Reverie I, 2017
Oil on linen
60 x 72 inches
153 x 183 cm 


Lost in Reverie II, 2017
Oil on linen
60 x 72 inches
153 x 183 cm 


Lost in Reverie III, 2017
Oil on linen
60 x 72 inches
153 x 183 cm 


Misty I, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 36 inches
92 x 92 cm 


Misty II, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 36 inches
92 x 92 cm 


Misty III, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 36 inches
92 x 92 cm 


Musical Reeds I, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 36 inches
92 x 92 cm 


Musical Reeds II, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 36 inches
92 x 92 cm 


Quiet Embrace I, 2017
Oil on linen
54 x 18 inches
137 x 46 cm 


Quiet Embrace II, 2017
Oil on linen
54 x 18 inches
137 x 46 cm 


Quiet Embrace III, 2017
Oil on linen
54 x 18 inches
137 x 46 cm 


Resilience I, 2017
Oil on linen
24 x 24 inches
61 x 61 cm


Resilience II, 2017
Oil on linen
24 x 24 inches
61 x 61 cm


Resilience III, 2017
Oil on linen
24 x 24 inches
61 x 61 cm


Resilience IV, 2017
Oil on linen
24 x 24 inches
61 x 61 cm


Resilience V, 2017
Oil on linen
24 x 24 inches
61 x 61 cm


Trilogy, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 48 inches
92 x 122.5 cm


Våga I, 2017
Oil on linen
78 x 78 inches
198 x 198  cm


Våga II, 2017
Oil on linen
78 x 78 inches
198 x 198  cm


Våga III, 2017
Oil on linen
78 x 78 inches
198 x 198  cm


Woven Hours, 2017
Oil on linen
24 x 48 inches
61 x 122 cm 


Revive, 2017
Oil on linen
58 x 58  inches
148 x 148 cm


Eternal III, 2017
Oil on linen
72 x 36 inches
183 x 92 cm


Calm after the storm, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 96 inches
92 x 244 cm


On the edge, 2017
Oil on linen
36 x 71 inches
92 x 182 cm


VIDEO


Våga I, II, III 2018
Multimedia


MEDIA

Anna Magazine 2019

ANNA MAGAZINE  Pojan kuoleman kokenut australialaistaiteilija Danelle Bergstrom päätyi Ahvenanmaalle ja sai karulta saarelta voimaa elämänmuutokseen: ”Rakastuin uudestaan elämään” By Tyyne Pennanen | November 2019 Photos by Kristiina Kurronen  Ruotsalaisten sukujuurien selvittäminen johdatti australialaisen kuvataiteilija Danelle Bergstromin, 62, Ahvenanmaalle. Syrjäisellä saarella vietetty aika antoi sysäyksen elämänmuutokseen. Miten lyö sydän, joka ei koskaan pysähdy? Sitä Danelle Bergstrom ei olisi saanut tietää, jollei hän olisi elokuussa vuonna 2016 saapunut taiteilijaresidenssiin Källskärin saarelle Ahvenanmaalle. Karulla ja syrjäisellä saarella oli vaatimaton

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Whisper | Behind the Collection

“Whisper is a series that communicates my journey of discovery and my curiosity into an unfamiliar lineage. This led me to uncover wilderness areas of Sweden; observing all four seasons rise and fall. The works presented here are not simply about location – they serve as metaphors for thoughts, dreams and feelings. I embraced a land where the sun is worshiped and where light changes dramatically from the darkest of winters to the bright shadow-less summers. It seemed an

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Return | Behind the Collection

‘You are where your heart is’ says Danelle Bergstrom, who paints the land via mnemonic references and imaginative conjurings rather than literally en plain air. Meditative and transformative, her new works symptomise a quiet surrender to the heart – not in an indulgent or sentimental way, but as an honest and raw acceptance of self. A layering of ghostly greys and bluey lilacs entwined with earthy umbers and sandy browns creates a poignant vision of

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ANNA MAGAZINE: ‘Rakastuin uudestaan elämään” [‘I fell in love with life again’]

 July, 2020

Feature Article

Anna Mag, Finland | Tyyne Pennanen


PRESS RELEASE

“Life can only be understood in reverse but must be lived forwards” – Danish philosopher, Søren Kierkegaard

Danelle Bergstrom creates wildly evocative landscapes that pictorialise the artist’s lived experiences. In her new collection, Bergstrom personifies the land as a vessel for emotion. The paintings are autobiographical expressions of recent experiences in Hill End, Australia, and Källskär, Åland, Finland, functioning as tangible footprints along well-trodden roads winding through the artist’s memory. Enlisting water as a trope for the tectonics of memory and emotion, the show charts a diametric journey from contentment to turmoil – from still dams to tumultuous seas.  Here Bergstrom meditates on the Swedish term våga, which translates to ‘dare’ whilst våg also denotes ‘wave’. She builds on the idea of physical and metaphysical reflection, looking at how disturbances of a water body create distortions of reality and yet the surface quickly regains composure – a poetic symbol for the experiences of loss and rebirth so endemic to Bergstrom’s art.

‘You are where your heart is’ says Bergstrom, who paints the land via mnemonic references and imaginative conjurings rather than literally en plein air. For the artist, this regional setting is a place of celebration, sorrow and serenity, embodying memorable years living there with her family. Rendering tranquil dams and native bushland with tender delicacy, the artist’s new paintings function as revised narratives evoking the transformative power of nature.  Layers of ghostly blues and lilacs entwined with earthy umbers create a spectral vision of the landscape that linger between the real and the remembered. In these works, Bergstrom has been inspired by the words of Danish philosopher, Søren Kierkegaard: ‘life can only be understood in reverse but must be lived forwards’. Water is pictured as a cathartic tool, cyclical interplays of distortion and composure symbolising the propensity for the past to help us heal and move forward. With no defined perspectival focus to anchor our gaze, the painterly dams invoke a broader emotional and psychological exploration of self and environment, carrying the viewer on a voyage through the artist’s dense psychological terrain. Sweeping swathes of blue water are veneered with fine dashes of dark reeds, their calligraphic construction reflecting a symbiotic balance of nature and culture.

While her Hill End works are hushed, warm and serene, Bergstrom’s Scandinavian seascapes evoke the roaring, dark energy of the ocean. Drawing from a recent residency on Källskär, a tiny remote island off Åland’s archipelago, between the coast of Sweden and Finland, the artist pictures the unrelenting waves as the heartbeat of the sea, a rhythm that counterparts our own pulsing body. Deep indigos and icy whites mingle in choppy strokes, symptomising a fraught process of surrendering to the heart; not in an indulgent or sentimental way, but as an honest and raw acceptance of self. The quiet surface reflections evoked in Bergstrom’s Hill End dams are supplanted by aerial inky voids, portals to darker worlds that visualise the artist’s feelings of being lost in a dream. The works are profoundly sensorial – loud, unrelenting waves ricochet around the picture plane with primal vigour while the wintry sun prickles exposed skin and a salty perfume drifts in the ocean breeze. 

In these works, the artist contemplates the paradox of water as a substance that is both formless yet forceful. At Källskär she would climb cliffs to pick wild blueberries before spending time peering down at the ocean below, mesmerised by the relentless motion and uniqueness of the waves, meditating on the poetry of how something so soft could model, chisel and erode the enduring rocks. ‘Am I the rock or am I the water?’ she reflects, translating these experiences as tropes for power and vulnerability; fluidity and stasis. In three of the larger works Bergstrom repeats the same rocky foundation while changing the forces of the water, a poignant analogy for her personal life which finds balance between staying strong and going with the flow. The dominant scale destabilises the viewer’s footing, luring us head-first into these primitive worlds where nature reigns superior and our repressed psychological wilderness materializes with subconscious persistence. For Bergstrom, this isolated Baltic island became a place of rebirth, heralding her future.

 

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