ARS FENNICA 2017

Expert's statement
Beatrix Ruf

ARS FENNICA 2017

 

The prestigious ARS FENNICA  award highlights the excellence and creativity of contemporary Finnish artists. Recognized for its significant contribution to the art scene, this award showcases works that transcend the boundaries of art and resonate with contemporary challenges. This year’s laureates are celebrated for their unique vision and their ability to engage the public through innovative and thoughtful artistic practices. ARS FENNICA  thus serves as a true tribute to the richness and diversity of art in Finland.

 

 

 

Beatrix Ruf

With my intense encounters with the shortlisted artists for the 2017 Ars Fennica prize – Maija Blåfield, Pekka and Teija Isorättyä, Perttu Saksa, Kari Vehosalo and Camilla Vuorenmaa – still fresh in my mind, I must emphasize the impressively high quality of their artistic projects and the installations and displays at the Kiasma Museum. Making the decision to give the award to one particular artist was not easy, especially considering the power of the exhibition as a whole and the interplay of the artists’ works in it.

Present in the work of all the artists are urgent actual conditions confronting us all with the question of identity, both mentally and physically, and ethical questions laying bare the conditions in which we all live. These confront us in carefully drafted portraits of humans and animals, radical personal exposures and ecological reflections.

Out of this group of artists and their projects I would like to highlight and award this year’s Ars Fennica prize to Kari Vehosalo.

 

While visiting his studio and seeing his installation in the Ars Fennica exhibition at Kiasma, the profound and striking experience was for me the ghostly rendering of things as we know them. Images, the history of thinking, the history of metaphor and symbol and the function of language all merge into a theatricality of disruption; in Vehosalo’s work, human desires in their many forms of cultural expression have become dysfunctional and are reconfigured.

The body, projections on realities, mythologies and meaning all break down, crash together and become questionable.

 

The medium of painting is simultaneously fetishized and dissolved through the artist’s precise choice of technique and homogenizing color. The simultaneous use of various artistic techniques from painting, photography and sculpture reverses carefully drafted handiwork into a non-painterly and deeply polluted experience. Everything is “readable” – but it is exactly this misleading perfection of Vehosalo’s paintings, objects and installation that culminates with equal force in physical and mental violence…

 

Images and materials decompose meaning, the production of images turns into a disconcerting, unsettling, infected and sterile appearance – and our aesthetic, as well as philosophical certainties, bounce off disingenuous beauty.

 

 

Beatrix Ruf

Curator
Beatrix Ruf is a curator and former director of the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. After studying, she worked as a curator at the Thurgau Art Museum in Warth in 1994-1998 and as director at Kunsthaus Glarus in 1998-2001. In 2001, Ruf was appointed director of the Zurich Art Hall. During her leadership period, a major expansion of the art hall was carried out in 2003-2012. In 2006, she curated the third Tate Triennial in London and in 2008 she was a curator of the Yokohama Triennial.