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Martin Tørsleff
Martin Tørsleff
"Bono", 100 x 100 cm (Olje og akryl på lerret)
The Great Dane, Martin Torsleff, Takes You on an Artistic Journey in Time and Space
But Torsleff bears the mark of the true artist; he can’t help being creative. ’I Must!’ could be an alternative motto for this tall, blond Scandinavian, though his primary motto is radiance and accuracy.
His technique might for
some seem old-fashioned – his studio bears a distinct scent of Oil
and Canvas – but it is this insistence on making the exact statement
with more traditional materials that shows his distance from certain
’Cash and Carry’-painters – and the concept of originality
was exactly what struck me the most when I crossed the threshold to
his studio in a bustling, but at the same time picturesque part of
Torsleff’s hometown, Aarhus:
The answer is that these are pictures made for empty walls, but
certainly not for empty brains: first and foremost, there is an
almost xylographic persistance in many of his pictures. You simply
have to allow a distance to these works, and then you will
see that the comparison to a flickering mega-sized television-screen
is not very far off. Torsleff is, of course, quite aware of this,
and he shows a talented, intellectual capacity – and highly literary
values – in his use of …intertextuality: Actually he uses
subtitles on many of his works. I can’t vouch for the
translation of the presumed utterances of Anne Bancroft and Norma
Jean Baker – it is drawn in Danish, but let me give an
example in the case of Louis Armstrong: First line is ’Oh my god,
it’s full of stars’ and second line is ’You’re flying the Concorde,
sir’. The first line shows Torsleff’s love of the film-media, but
also his literary ambitions and intellectual gaming with the
audience; we all know what Captain David Bowman said when he entered
the ancient, cosmic railway-station – so the following utterance
must be imaginative. At least Torsleff could not give a clear
explication of this. But perhaps there really is a very refined
Concordance in these high-flying works; as long as some stars
are bigger than us, Torsleff will continue his ingenious
explorations of the human possibilities in a rather big and
relatively strange universe.
Kilde:www.pop-art.dk
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