Location of Surprise and Perplexity
17.2. – 13.3.2005
Nina Roos ( born 1956) is one of the most important contemporary painters in the Nordic countries. Her retrospectives at the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art (2001) and Malmö Konsthall (2002) aroused a great deal of attention and provided her with many new admirers. In the autumn of 2003, Roos received the coveted Carnegie Art Award. In this connection Lars Nittve, director of Moderna Museet in Stockholm commented on Roos in the following terms: "She has been an excellent painter for many years, and her recent works are among her best. They are extremely convincing, specific to her, enigmatic, yet accessible."
Mysteriousness is one of the core properties of Nina Roos’s paintings. It is difficult to describe them exhaustively, to explain them ultimately. They will always have some trait remaining that can be perceived, clarified and explained only by viewing. Roos changes and develops continuously, and previously adopted ways of viewing will never apply as such to her most recent works. They answer questions that the viewer has not yet been able to formulate; they are challenging, mysterious and strangely beautiful.
This time Nina Roos will present in the studio of Galerie Anhava a new and fascinating series of paintings inspired by Jean-Honoré Fragonard .
Whistle three times
25.9. – 19.10. 2003
A solo gallery exhibition by Nina Roos is always
an art event in Finland. The previous one was held six years ago
at Galerie Anhava, and in 2001 Roos's partly retrospective showing
"Through Images" was held at the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary
Art. She has otherwise exhibited abroad, in Toronto, Berlin, Odense,
Bergen, Oslo and the Malmö Konsthall, where her extensive
and widely noted retrospective "Shifting Spaces: A Rapid
Touch" was recently on show.
Nina Roos is the recipient of the Carnegie Award
for 2004. In connection with the award Lars Nittve, director of
Stockholm's Moderna Museet described Nina Roos in the following
terms: "She has been an excellent painter for many years,
and her recent works are among her best. They are extremely convincing,
specific to her, enigmatic, yet accessible.."
The enigmatic is precisely one of the core properties
of Nina Roos's works. It is difficult to completely verbalize
and exhaustively explain her paintings. They will always have
some property that can be perceived, clarified and explained only
by viewing. Roos changes and develops continuously and earlier
ways of viewing never apply as such to her latest works. They
are answers to questions that the viewer is not yet able to formulate.
They are challenging, mysterious and strangely beautiful.