Home Upload Photo Upload Videos Write a Blog Analytics Messaging Streaming Create Adverts Creators Program
Bebuzee Afghanistan Bebuzee Albania Bebuzee Algeria Bebuzee Andorra Bebuzee Angola Bebuzee Antigua and Barbuda Bebuzee Argentina Bebuzee Armenia Bebuzee Australia Bebuzee Austria Bebuzee Azerbaijan Bebuzee Bahamas Bebuzee Bahrain Bebuzee Bangladesh Bebuzee Barbados Bebuzee Belarus Bebuzee Belgium Bebuzee Belize Bebuzee Benin Bebuzee Bhutan Bebuzee Bolivia Bebuzee Bosnia and Herzegovina Bebuzee Botswana Bebuzee Brazil Bebuzee Brunei Bebuzee Bulgaria Bebuzee Burkina Faso Bebuzee Burundi Bebuzee Cabo Verde Bebuzee Cambodia Bebuzee Cameroon Bebuzee Canada Bebuzee Central African Republic Bebuzee Chad Bebuzee Chile Bebuzee China Bebuzee Colombia Bebuzee Comoros Bebuzee Costa Rica Bebuzee Côte d'Ivoire Bebuzee Croatia Bebuzee Cuba Bebuzee Cyprus Bebuzee Czech Republic Bebuzee Democratic Republic of the Congo Bebuzee Denmark Bebuzee Djibouti Bebuzee Dominica Bebuzee Dominican Republic Bebuzee Ecuador Bebuzee Egypt Bebuzee El Salvador Bebuzee Equatorial Guinea Bebuzee Eritrea Bebuzee Estonia Bebuzee Eswatini Bebuzee Ethiopia Bebuzee Fiji Bebuzee Finland Bebuzee France Bebuzee Gabon Bebuzee Gambia Bebuzee Georgia Bebuzee Germany Bebuzee Ghana Bebuzee Greece Bebuzee Grenada Bebuzee Guatemala Bebuzee Guinea Bebuzee Guinea-Bissau Bebuzee Guyana Bebuzee Haiti Bebuzee Honduras Bebuzee Hong Kong Bebuzee Hungary Bebuzee Iceland Bebuzee India Bebuzee Indonesia Bebuzee Iran Bebuzee Iraq Bebuzee Ireland Bebuzee Israel Bebuzee Italy Bebuzee Jamaica Bebuzee Japan Bebuzee Jordan Bebuzee Kazakhstan Bebuzee Kenya Bebuzee Kiribati Bebuzee Kuwait Bebuzee Kyrgyzstan Bebuzee Laos Bebuzee Latvia Bebuzee Lebanon Bebuzee Lesotho Bebuzee Liberia Bebuzee Libya Bebuzee Liechtenstein Bebuzee Lithuania Bebuzee Luxembourg Bebuzee Madagascar Bebuzee Malawi Bebuzee Malaysia Bebuzee Maldives Bebuzee Mali Bebuzee Malta Bebuzee Marshall Islands Bebuzee Mauritania Bebuzee Mauritius Bebuzee Mexico Bebuzee Micronesia Bebuzee Moldova Bebuzee Monaco Bebuzee Mongolia Bebuzee Montenegro Bebuzee Morocco Bebuzee Mozambique Bebuzee Myanmar Bebuzee Namibia Bebuzee Nauru Bebuzee Nepal Bebuzee Netherlands Bebuzee New Zealand Bebuzee Nicaragua Bebuzee Niger Bebuzee Nigeria Bebuzee North Korea Bebuzee North Macedonia Bebuzee Norway Bebuzee Oman Bebuzee Pakistan Bebuzee Palau Bebuzee Panama Bebuzee Papua New Guinea Bebuzee Paraguay Bebuzee Peru Bebuzee Philippines Bebuzee Poland Bebuzee Portugal Bebuzee Qatar Bebuzee Republic of the Congo Bebuzee Romania Bebuzee Russia Bebuzee Rwanda Bebuzee Saint Kitts and Nevis Bebuzee Saint Lucia Bebuzee Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Bebuzee Samoa Bebuzee San Marino Bebuzee São Tomé and Príncipe Bebuzee Saudi Arabia Bebuzee Senegal Bebuzee Serbia Bebuzee Seychelles Bebuzee Sierra Leone Bebuzee Singapore Bebuzee Slovakia Bebuzee Slovenia Bebuzee Solomon Islands Bebuzee Somalia Bebuzee South Africa Bebuzee South Korea Bebuzee South Sudan Bebuzee Spain Bebuzee Sri Lanka Bebuzee Sudan Bebuzee Suriname Bebuzee Sweden Bebuzee Switzerland Bebuzee Syria Bebuzee Taiwan Bebuzee Tajikistan Bebuzee Tanzania Bebuzee Thailand Bebuzee Timor-Leste Bebuzee Togo Bebuzee Tonga Bebuzee Trinidad and Tobago Bebuzee Tunisia Bebuzee Turkey Bebuzee Turkmenistan Bebuzee Tuvalu Bebuzee Uganda Bebuzee Ukraine Bebuzee United Arab Emirates Bebuzee United Kingdom Bebuzee Uruguay Bebuzee Uzbekistan Bebuzee Vanuatu Bebuzee Venezuela Bebuzee Vietnam Bebuzee World Wide Bebuzee Yemen Bebuzee Zambia Bebuzee Zimbabwe
Blog Image

'The less you see, the more you project': Henni Alftan, painter of cropped and suspenseful scenes, gets her market moment at Sprà¼th Magers in London

The Finnish artist explains her process and her relationship with cinema

The quiet and cerebral paintings of the Finnish artist Henni Alftanhave become an increasingly prominent presence across fair booths and online viewing rooms in the past five years. Two buzzy solo shows in 2020 at the trendsetting galleries Various Small Fires in Seoul and Karma in New York (the latter of which brought her to the 2021 edition of Art Basel in Miami Beach) preceded a small exhibition at Sprüth Magers Berlin in September last year, when the artist signed to the gallery. Alftan has now staged her her largest solo show to date in Sprüth Magers’s London space.

For the exhibition Contour (until 30 July), Paris-based Alftan has made 14 oil paintings, which, in their cropped framing and precise compositions, are akin to film stills. She has depicted domestic scenes that occasionally contain figures (such as Mother [2021], pictured) as well as close-ups of books and a woman smoking a cigarette: images meant to elicit both recognition and confusion from the viewer. Her process is slow, limiting rates of production, according to gallery founder Monika Sprüth, who discovered Alftan's work at her Karma show (where paintings were selling for around $15,000). Works in the London show are priced between $40,000 to $85,000.

While Alftan’s reticent, Minimalist interior scenes are aesthetically pleasing and suit domestic spaces, they are, according to both Sprüth and her gallery co-founder Philomene Magers, equally underpinned by conceptual ideas that challenge and muse on the limitations inherent to the medium of painting, calling to mind the visual language of Thomas Demand and works by Richard Artschwager. Alftan’s work is held by a number of major Finnish contemporary art museums as well as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

The Art Newspaper: Your gallerist Monika Sprüth tells me that your process is quite slow, are you able to explain a little about how you work?

Henni Alftan: "My subjects come from everyday observations of things I see that usually intertwine with reflections on looking, painting and image-making.

I start by writing down a worded proposition 'I would like to paint this thing in this manner,' with sometimes some additional notes. I then start to work on a sketch that is quite a precise idea of the painting to come.I start from scratch with no particular model so as to be able to negotiate between purely formal considerations and the resemblance to the subject that I’m referring to. The ones that I then judge to be “a good picture” make it to the canvas, and most of those get the seal of approval to leave the studio. I reject a lot of my preparatory sketches though or redo them several times.

So yes it’s quite slow, notably because I don’t make several versions of the same picture. There’s just that one painting that can be quite small."

I’d like to hear more about the subject matter and what the paintings are about, how you decide and why you choose to paint them?

"I like to paint subjects that also comment on their conditions of existence. I have a lot of curtains, windows, reflections and even paintings themselves in the paintings. Variations on opaque and transparent etc. It’s not so much about making art about art as it is about what is this thing in this context. For me it’s perhaps more existential. (Maybe that’s why it doesn’t feel right to make variations on the same picture. )I always see paintings as sort of archetypes of the art object. I do medium sized oil paintings on canvas.

But I’m not a conceptual artist. I have no protocol that tells me what I can and can not do in my work. Some of the choices are purely intuitional. Some pictures just haunt me."

Your works are framed very closely and in a cinematic fashion. Can you discuss your relationship with film and cinema?

"I do my framing in the sketching phase and I make them as tight as possible so that there would be nothing superfluous in the painting. I design my sketches in view of rectangular shape of the tableau that is already there. So one of the reasons for the framing is also formal. The other is indeed a lesson that I learned from cinematic imagery, that the less you see the more you project. I’d like people to really look instead of just passively see. The fact that you see that there is something that is hidden, that you are not seeing, creates a suspense not unlike you would indeed find in a certain cinema.

I do think that pictures infiltrate our minds and pay a significant role in how we interpret our lives and the world. I don’t think my pictures feel new. It’s like I dug them up from the back of my mind where they were etched from looking too hard. Read More...

 

Previous Post

‘The Natural Forms' Exhibition of 2022 at Finnish President's Summer Residence Open to Public; Closed in August for Two Years

Next Post

The 9 Best Drawing and Painting Apps for Digital Artists

Comments