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Inka & Niclas: Perceptions

Jan 18, 2025 - Feb 22, 2025

The acclaimed artistic duo Inka and Niclas Lindergård primarily create photography-based works. Their diverse practice draws inspiration from the aesthetics of popular culture, examining its influence on how we perceive nature. Perceptions presents a selection of their works, exhibited for the first time at Dorothée Nilsson Gallery.

„How does one summarise a practice spanning nearly two decades?

The photographic medium possesses a violent power. Photography creates beauty, but it can also consume the nature it depicts – like the generic image of a palm tree at sunset that has adorned printed calendars, beach towels, and posters since the 80s. Consumed by popular culture, the motif became so saturated that it still tends to touch on kitsch aesthetics. As a result, viewing an actual palm tree at sunset can seem trivial to someone who has seen too many reproduced depictions.

In their lens-based practice, Inka and Niclas Lindergård recurrently delve into the realm of the overly consumed portrayals of nature. Throughout their work, the artist duo has investigated the mechanics of vision and our relationship with nature as depicted through the camera lens. Despite classical training in the photographic medium, there is a constant urge to challenge its conventions, to playfully explore what photography can be in the encounter with new materials and forms. Today, photography and the photographic gaze have become so prevalent that most of us now possess a developed visual perception. We know at increasingly younger ages when the lighting conditions are optimal for a certain type of image, or from which angle a landscape is most ideally depicted. With the help of digital platforms, nature photographs are consumed in a way never before seen. We have access to innumerable sunsets, seascapes, and depictions of the most magnificent northern lights – to the extent that the eye becomes saturated with the heightened beauty. The abundance simply numbs us. How does this affect our perception?“



The acclaimed artistic duo Inka and Niclas Lindergård primarily create photography-based works. Their diverse practice draws inspiration from the aesthetics of popular culture, examining its influence on how we perceive nature. Perceptions presents a selection of their works, exhibited for the first time at Dorothée Nilsson Gallery.

„How does one summarise a practice spanning nearly two decades?

The photographic medium possesses a violent power. Photography creates beauty, but it can also consume the nature it depicts – like the generic image of a palm tree at sunset that has adorned printed calendars, beach towels, and posters since the 80s. Consumed by popular culture, the motif became so saturated that it still tends to touch on kitsch aesthetics. As a result, viewing an actual palm tree at sunset can seem trivial to someone who has seen too many reproduced depictions.

In their lens-based practice, Inka and Niclas Lindergård recurrently delve into the realm of the overly consumed portrayals of nature. Throughout their work, the artist duo has investigated the mechanics of vision and our relationship with nature as depicted through the camera lens. Despite classical training in the photographic medium, there is a constant urge to challenge its conventions, to playfully explore what photography can be in the encounter with new materials and forms. Today, photography and the photographic gaze have become so prevalent that most of us now possess a developed visual perception. We know at increasingly younger ages when the lighting conditions are optimal for a certain type of image, or from which angle a landscape is most ideally depicted. With the help of digital platforms, nature photographs are consumed in a way never before seen. We have access to innumerable sunsets, seascapes, and depictions of the most magnificent northern lights – to the extent that the eye becomes saturated with the heightened beauty. The abundance simply numbs us. How does this affect our perception?“



Artists on show

Contact details

Potsdamer Strasse 65 Berlin, Germany D-10785

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