After four years of studies at Canberra School of Art,
Australian National University I have returned to Tärnaby in north Sweden,
where I have established a hot / cold glass workshop and studio.
Most of my life I have lived in the cold; as a child
during the long winter months above the Arctic Circle, in a town called Gällivare,
as well as an adult during many years working with skiing and travelling between
the northern- and southern hemisphere’s winters.
One of the reasons why I initially chose glass as a
vehicle to express myself is because of its transparency and resemblance to the
cold. Grinding, polishing, etching and engraving planes in transparent glass are
techniques I use to explore “winter-qualities”. So the winter, with its vast
winter space and light, play an important part in my work.
And
glass is brought to life by heat…
I use planes of colours, often evolving from my Sami
heritage, as a metaphor to express a central part — the heart and fire of
life. These planes are formed by “roll-up” and glass blowing in the hot
workshop or by fusing and slumping in the kiln.
My hotworked, kilnformed and coldworked glass has been
part of exhibitions nationally and internationally. Venezia Aperto Vetro 1998
— Italy, SOFA New York 1999 — USA and “Vessels” The International
Exhibition of Glass 2000 — Japan being world renowned.
I have work represented in permanent public collections at ex. the National Gallery of Australia, Nationalmuseum Stockholm Sweden, Museum of Design and Applied Arts Reykjavik Iceland, Ájtte Swedish Sámi Museum Jokkmokk, National Swedish Public Art Council and Sámi Parliament of Norway and Sweden.