Peter Ern

Peter Ern
Peter Ern © Photo: No WaIT AB


From Encounter to M

Peter Ern’s art forces us to sharpen our gaze. Not because his images are complicated or unfathomable, but rather because they are always so focused and precise. Everything in Peter Ern’s paintings looks as though it is there out of pure necessity. Superfluous details distracting the gaze from the main motif have no place in his imagery. This notwithstanding, his paintings always include fragments of potential stories. No loud assertions and narratives, but subtler, lingering images of a fleeting moment. As when his eye catches something along the highway between Stockholm and his home in Norrtälje; a road sign, trees silhouetted against the sky, buildings, or a figure waiting at a bus stop. The paintings could almost be film stills.

Although nature and trees often appear in Peter Ern’s paintings, it is actually an urbanised world we see depicted. In other words, this is not about portraying a pristine and romanticised nature, and despite the fact that people seldom appear in the paintings, one can always find traces of their existence.

I see his artistic strategy as not about having others appreciate the beauty of trivial aspects of everyday life, but more about the desire to be able to see without getting caught up in details. It is, at the same time, clearly apparent how the paintings always usher my gaze towards various everyday scenes. Both a hazy day at the beach and a sprawling Monstera plant on a windowsill are captured with the same level of acuity, and although the motifs are commonplace, there is no sense of detachment or distanced approach to them. When Ern uses photographs (his own as well as those of others) as his point of departure, it is not in order to photographically depict reality. Instead, this is his way of analysing, for example, what a four-lane highway looks like as it veers off into the surrounding nature, how people move, or what a particular species of tree looks like. Those well acquainted with art history will also find several references to or borrowed elements from other artists.

Peter Ern’s attempts at achieving a concentration in his pictures becomes all the more clear as one views the paintings from recent years with their recurring motifs such as the sign in the shape of a cloud on the roof of the baby supply store, Babyland, or the clothes on display in a shop window. In the painting “Britt’s Fashion” from 2006, the clothes appear clearly and in stark contrast to the otherwise dark shop window, with a lit window with drawn curtains on the second floor. In an earlier painting the proportions of the house are slightly different, but the basic features are the same. The four shop windows bathe in a strong white light, while all the windows in the second floor are dark. The mannequins in the shop windows are seen here only as dark silhouettes. In both paintings, the house is desolately situated on a street half-lit by street lamps.

At the same time, one can wonder what it is that allows us to recognise the house as well as many of the other locations in his paintings? What is it that keeps his paintings from simply being private diary images that merely tell of places and moods the artist has experienced in his home environment outside Norrtälje and elsewhere? 

Chances are, the answer lies in Peter Ern’s ability to entice the viewer to sharpen his/her gaze by constantly reducing and clearing away all irrelevant elements from his pictures. Peter Ern thereby achieves a perspicuity without fixing the paintings to one interpretation.  

If one furthermore chooses to view the paintings as memory images, they remain as open in character as fleeting dreams and recollections.

Thomas Olsson 
Thomas Olsson lives in Stockholm and works as a freelance journalist and an art critic.

Biography

Peter Ern is born in Sollentuna, Sweden 1965. Lives and works in Norrtälje.

Education

1987-1992 
The Royal Academy of Art, Stockholm, Sweden

1984-1986 
Konstskolan Idun Lovén, Stockholm, Sweden


Selected Solo Exhibitions

2016 
Domeij Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden (presentation in Swedish)
Peter Ern s motifs are recurring: the forest, the lake, the meadow and the houses. With his subtle story-telling from the rural area around Norrtälje, where he lives and works, he builds his pictorial world. There is a singular narrative to Ern’s paintings. The atmosphere of a particular place, a place that feels familiar. Ern has the ability to capture one’s interest with even the most trivial and mundane of motifs, due perhaps to the fact that he eradicates all non-essential elements from the image. With simple means and a restrained colour scale, he focuses on a state, a brief moment that presumably anyone can perceive, like a still from a film. A short instance from everyday life.

Lilla k, Norrtälje, Sweden
Körsbärsgården, Burgsvik, Gotland, Sweden

2015 
Wadström Tönnheim gallery, Skanör, Sweden

2014
Galleri PS, Göteborg, Sweden

2013
Norrtälje konsthall, Sweden

2011 
Galleri Peter Bergman, Stockholm, Sweden 

2010 
Enköpings Konsthall, Sweden

2008 
ALP/Peter Bergman, Stockholm, Sweden
Galerie Davide Di Maggio, Vienna Art Fair, Austria

2006
Galerie Davide Di Maggio, Berlin, Germany

2005 
ALP/Peter Bergman, Stockholm, Sweden

2004 
Galeria Becker, Jyväskylä, Finland

2003
Norrtälje Konsthall, Norrtälje, Sweden
ALP galleri Peter Bergman, Stockholm, Sweden

2002 
Galleri PS, Göteborg, Sweden

1999 
Galleri Doktor Glas, Stockholm, Sweden

1995 
Galleri Kavaletten, Stockholm, Sweden

1992 
Galleri Mejan, Stockholm, Sweden


Selected Group Exhibitions

2016
Collected Works! 30 years with the Maria Bonnier Dahlin´s Foundation
Bonniers konsthall, Stockholm

2010 
Das Swedische Modell, Galerie Im Regierungsviertel, Berlin, Germany Market, ALP/Peter Bergman, Stockholm, Sweden

2009
Something in the air, Beaver Projects, Copenhagen, Denmark

2008
Everybody Counts, Vestfossen Kunstlaboratorium, Norway

2007
I Love Malmö, Kuntsthalle Turku, Finland

2006
Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm
New Painters Part II, Fondazione Mudima, Milano, Italy
Art Forum Berlin, Germany
Galerie Davide Di Maggio, Berlin, Germany

2005
Hallstaviks Konsthall, Norrtälje, Sweden
Liste 05, ALP galleri Peter Bergman, Basel, Switzerland

2004  
ID:i, Stockholm, Sweden
Stockholm Art Fair, Sweden

2002
you lonesome tonight?, Konstnärshuset, Stockholm, Sweden

1999
Konstakademin (The Academy of Fine Arts), Stockholm, Sweden

1998
Underbelly, Adelaide, Australia

1996
Maria Bonnier Dahlin Foundation, Stockholm Artfair, Sweden

1993 
Bilder, Stockholm, Sweden

1991
Reaktionen und Reflektionen, Bahnhof Westend, Berlin, Germany


Public Collections/Commissions in Sweden

Moderna Museet
Malmö Konstmuseum
Norrköpings Konstmuseum
Göteborgs konstmuseum
Norrtälje Kommun
Uppsala Academic Hospital
Landstinget Göteborg
Stockholms Kulturförvaltning
Sveriges Allmänna Konstförening
Apoteksbolaget
Public Art Agency Sweden


Artist of the Quarter – Enjoy Scandinavian Art


The content of this biography is updated on behalf of the artist.