黑料不打烊


Seeable/Sayable

28 Oct, 2016 - 29 Jan, 2017

What is created through the interchange between words and images, between the literary and the visual? This is the topic of the group exhibition Seeable/Sayable, which sets up an encounter between Norwegian and international artists and writers from various generations. Wergelandsveien, the street running along the eastern edge of the Palace Park, will be reinvigorated this autumn by the first major collaboration between the two neighbouring institutions Kunstnernes Hus and the House of Literature. In addition, a series of performances will be held nearby at Grotten, the Norwegian poet Henrik Wergeland鈥檚 (18颅08颅鈥1845) famed stone grotto lying beneath the Norwegian state鈥檚 honorary residence for artists in the Palace Park.

Images and words are closely intertwined in our ideas and stories about the world. They are our fundamental tools for grasping the world, even as they work on different levels, with one showing and the other telling. Nevertheless, silent images can also speak, and indeed even argue, while a text can conjure up a world of mental images. The exhibition examines how text and image charge and influence one another, but also how they undermine and cast doubt about one another. Seeable/Sayable shows how art and literature create both personal and collective universes of ideas.

Curated by Ida Kierulf and Helga-Marie Nordby, the exhibition at Kunstnernes Hus includes works by international stars as well as new productions by a number of younger contemporary artists. The series of performances will take place both at Kunstnernes Hus and across the street in the grotto, Grotten. A series of commissioned literary texts (ekphrases), curated by the author Eivind Hofstad Evjemo and written by both well-known and up-and-coming writers, will be presented as an audio work in the exhibition. In addition, the House of Literature has curated a series of lectures and discussions to be held throughout the exhibition period.



What is created through the interchange between words and images, between the literary and the visual? This is the topic of the group exhibition Seeable/Sayable, which sets up an encounter between Norwegian and international artists and writers from various generations. Wergelandsveien, the street running along the eastern edge of the Palace Park, will be reinvigorated this autumn by the first major collaboration between the two neighbouring institutions Kunstnernes Hus and the House of Literature. In addition, a series of performances will be held nearby at Grotten, the Norwegian poet Henrik Wergeland鈥檚 (18颅08颅鈥1845) famed stone grotto lying beneath the Norwegian state鈥檚 honorary residence for artists in the Palace Park.

Images and words are closely intertwined in our ideas and stories about the world. They are our fundamental tools for grasping the world, even as they work on different levels, with one showing and the other telling. Nevertheless, silent images can also speak, and indeed even argue, while a text can conjure up a world of mental images. The exhibition examines how text and image charge and influence one another, but also how they undermine and cast doubt about one another. Seeable/Sayable shows how art and literature create both personal and collective universes of ideas.

Curated by Ida Kierulf and Helga-Marie Nordby, the exhibition at Kunstnernes Hus includes works by international stars as well as new productions by a number of younger contemporary artists. The series of performances will take place both at Kunstnernes Hus and across the street in the grotto, Grotten. A series of commissioned literary texts (ekphrases), curated by the author Eivind Hofstad Evjemo and written by both well-known and up-and-coming writers, will be presented as an audio work in the exhibition. In addition, the House of Literature has curated a series of lectures and discussions to be held throughout the exhibition period.



Contact details

Sunday
12:00 - 6:00 PM
Tuesday - Friday
11:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Saturday
11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Wergelandsveien 17 Oslo, Norway 0167

What's on nearby

Map View
Sign in to 黑料不打烊.com