The exhibition Dear Landscape, marks Theodor Nymark’s latest attempt
to explore ecology as both catalyst and resource for creativity, presenting
a series of new paintings that continues the artist’s experiments with
algae powder, or spirulina, with illustrations printed on durable fire- and
water-resistant PVC. This group of works is part of Nymark’s ongoing
series “Drafts of Ecology,” which, with both projects and individual works,
studies the theory and concept of ecology, and explores the terminology
in biological, aesthetic, and political frameworks. The short film made by
the artist himself is narrated with a letter addressed to the endearing
landscape, responding to its changing features and bleak future amid the
most serious climate crisis of our time.
Through vector line drawings based on carefully selected paintings from
Danish art history, the almost topographical illustrations and figures
emerge. When placed upon a fixed grid, the imagery points toward
concepts of recycling history, rewriting it and building new narratives from
already existing ones, just as mythology always does.
The PVC, acting as the painter’s canvas in the present work, is stretched
onto wooden stretcher bars, mimicking painting traditions that do not
typically apply to such materials. These illustrations arise from thorough
investigation into the history of Danish painting, more specifically, into the
Modern Breakthrough. In this historical movement, rural landscapes and
genre scenes of Scandinavian workers, households and animals were
depicted in a more realistic manner, in great opposition to the early
Romantic paintings depicting more constructed gardens and recreational
aristocratic scenes.
By going through exhibitions and catalogs, Nymark selects imagery from
which the illustrations derive, referring to representations of certain
agricultural scenarios, such as the cycles of nutrition and the system it
relies upon. Some pieces depict haystacks laid freely as ephemeral
sculptures on a field; some portray horses bringing in the harvested hay;
some detail the animals that feed on the hay (namely cattle and horses);
and lastly others render the image of hay raking, which is a practice of
turning grass around in intervals in order for it to dry and serve as nutrition
for cattle, horses, pigs and other livestock. This practice is similar to turning
the images around in order for them to become relevant anew.
Historically, nutrition as an agricultural concept is closely connected with
hay production, however, as of now, animal feed is highly manufactured,
involving multi-step processing. Instead of hay, more cost-effective raw
materials such as soybeans or corn became widely used in the farming
industry. That said, as one might already know through numerous
documentaries and news articles, growing these ingredients for livestock
is causing serious deforestation leading to immense CO2 emissions. The
current work thereby aims to showcase the rigid history, and to explore
alternatives of how we can inhabit our surrounding environment.
The works also act as an experiment following an ongoing painterly practice
of inhabiting the algae powder in various mediums with different
expressions and techniques. The artist uses algae to explore its materiality
and utility. Not only is it a trendy nutritional superfood in contemporary
bohemian life, but it also has significance for the world’s biosphere, with
technological research counting biofuel, organic pigments, biodegradable
plastics, and medicine. As a material with a multitude of visual qualities, the
algae has an absolutely brilliant color, and changes its nuance with the
amount of sunlight exposure. Algae is also a hazardous photosynthetic
organism that in large amounts (algae bloom) can be deadly to humankind.
The damage-causing pollutive algae bloom is due to the overly nutritional
excess water flowing from Big Ag (industrial agriculture) into great lakes and
oceans, creating a dangerous cornucopia for the algae, therefore presenting
a dialectic interpretation of the most important organism on Earth.