Anders Ljungberg, Ebb, 2022, sculpture, patinated brass (partly tinplated), burnt oak, 23 x 21 x 7 "
(Inv# 7480)
Anders Ljungberg, Förlåten #2, 2022, chrome-plated brass (partially silver-plated) , tin-plated copper, 17 x 14 x 5 "
(Inv# 7479)
Unfortunately the title "Förlåten" is hard to translate into English ( I have asked many English speaking friends) But in Swedish it means the curtain that was separating the most holy from were people walked around in the Temple in Jerusalem 2000 years ago. It has also been used in Christianity but also in profane use. In Swedish it is the same word as Forgiven which makes it tricky to translate.
The Förlåten piece consists of two parts which one is Functional jug. The other one a curious kind of lid. The photo shows how they are placed together.
Anders Ljungberg, Act / Curtain, 2019, tin plated copper, reconstructed marble
12.4 x 8.58 x 6.3 " / 31.5 x 21.8 x 16 cm (act)
48.5 x 33 x 16.2cm / 19 x 13 x 6.4" (curtain)
Sold
Anders Ljungberg, Act / Curtain, 2019, tin plated copper, reconstructed marble
12.4 x 8.58 x 6.3 " / 31.5 x 21.8 x 16 cm (act)
48.5 x 33 x 16.2cm / 19 x 13 x 6.4" (curtain)
Sold
Anders Ljungberg, Portal, 2020, vessel for marijuana + silver smoking pipe,
silver, tin-plated copper, 2.95 x 10.25 x 6.9" / 7.5 x 26 x 17.5 cm
Made for Ornamentum's Up In Smoke exhibition, Swedish silversmith Anders Ljungberg has created two functional artworks including Portal, an exquisitely hand-crafted sculpture that brings to mind Brutalist architecture with a small dose of Surrealism. The central element detaches to be used for storage, while a small pipe of silver appears as bubbles leaking from a fissure in the structure.
"Humankind has always searched for the magic in life. In times marked by rationalism, spiritualism and magic have become even more desired. Those concepts have , as so many other concepts and ideas in the contemporary, been kidnapped by a consumerist culture, in which drugs can sometimes offer a way to the magic and the spiritual but also to the highly desired moment of rest. Those mental states can easily be reached and consumed as anything else in the contemporary consumerist culture.
In my own youth, the use of marijuana was often associated with rituals of masculinity which made me feel both uncomfortable and excluded since I didn't find any interest of being a part of it and honestly didn't know how to do it.
In the work Portal, we see signs of this masculinity ritual - as a monument over something both desirable and limiting "
Ljungberg lives and maintains a studio outside of Stockholm, he also holds the position of Professor at Kostfack, the University College of Art, Craft and Design, Stockholm, Sweden.
Anders Ljungberg, Bubble Dream, 2020
storage container with smoking implements, silver, chrome-plated brass (lids)
9.06 x 7.48 x 5.3"/ 23 x 19 x 13.5 cm
Made for Ornamentum's Up In Smoke exhibition, Swedish silversmith Anders Ljungberg has created two functional artworks including Bubble Dream, an exquisitely hand-crafted multi-element modular sculpture that dissassembles into a vessel for marijuana, pipe, a mobile container + small one-hitter pipe and ash tray. The one-hitter pipe van also be fitted as extra filter in the larger pipe.
"Humankind has always searched for the magic in life. In times marked by rationalism, spiritualism and magic have become even more desired. Those concepts have , as so many other concepts and ideas in the contemporary, been kidnapped by a consumerist culture, in which drugs can sometimes offer a way to the magic and the spiritual but also to the highly desired moment of rest. Those mental states can easily be reached and consumed as anything else in the contemporary consumerist culture.
In my own youth, the use of marijuana was often associated with rituals of masculinity which made me feel both uncomfortable and excluded since I didn't find any interest of being a part of it and honestly didn't know how to do it.
In bubble dream, something is going on that is both enticing and threatening in its fermenting high glossiness. Both objects consist of functional elements that in the handling of them create structures for a ritual, but which together also create a sculptural whole."
Ljungberg lives and maintains a studio outside of Stockholm, he also holds the position of Professor at Kostfack, the University College of Art, Craft and Design, Stockholm, Sweden.
Anders Ljungberg, Bubble Dream, 2020
storage container with smoking implements, silver, chrome-plated brass (lids)
9.06 x 7.48 x 5.3"/ 23 x 19 x 13.5 cm
Made for Ornamentum's Up In Smoke exhibition, Swedish silversmith Anders Ljungberg has created two functional artworks including Bubble Dream, an exquisitely hand-crafted multi-element modular sculpture that dissassembles into a vessel for marijuana, pipe, a mobile container + small one-hitter pipe and ash tray. The one-hitter pipe van also be fitted as extra filter in the larger pipe.
"Humankind has always searched for the magic in life. In times marked by rationalism, spiritualism and magic have become even more desired. Those concepts have , as so many other concepts and ideas in the contemporary, been kidnapped by a consumerist culture, in which drugs can sometimes offer a way to the magic and the spiritual but also to the highly desired moment of rest. Those mental states can easily be reached and consumed as anything else in the contemporary consumerist culture.
In my own youth, the use of marijuana was often associated with rituals of masculinity which made me feel both uncomfortable and excluded since I didn't find any interest of being a part of it and honestly didn't know how to do it.
In Bubble Dream, something is going on that is both enticing and threatening in its fermenting high glossiness. Both objects consist of functional elements that in the handling of them create structures for a ritual, but which together also create a sculptural whole."
Ljungberg lives and maintains a studio outside of Stockholm, he also holds the position of Professor at Kostfack, the University College of Art, Craft and Design, Stockholm, Sweden.