WOMEN
(English)
Images:
1. Twilight Roses
2. Spring
3. Midsummer Night
4. Rose Bed
5. In the Sun
6. Secrets
7. Siren
of the Woods.
8. Venus of Arlington
9. Ample curves
10. Tiger Lily
***
Facebook friend Sherry Iaquinta Jannette: Your
paintings, especially the city scenes, are very dreamlike. When I'm feeling
sort of frigid they always thaw me out, leaving me with a great sense of warmth
like hot cocoa on a cold winter's day.
***
My presence on the international website Myspace has generated a lot of valuable contacts and
many comments on my art. Here a few of them:
“A great pleasure to
finally meet a love child of pop art and impressionism.
Fascinating work of great skill with sublime symphonic
coloration and harmonies.”
Mark
“Your work is incredible. I like to look
at pieces for a time and try to see all the hidden images found within, the
longer I look, the more I see. Truly beautiful and magical.”
Lady
“I love your paintings they make me
float while looking at them, in the descovery of their beauty they free my mind. Thank you, for those moments!”
“Your Artwork is lovely like a poem yet
also very
complex, to say the least...I can see influences from: Dali, Chagall and Gogh”
Bijou Blue,
“Fantastic merging of pop culture and
cultured pop...it burbles and splats the creative~canvas
COOL style.”
1 Headed Dog band, Wonkatania
“Your work is romance, mystery, scandal,
and insight all rolled up into one. Love it!”
Mary Celeste,Tyler Texas
“There are people who are craftsmen,
People who are artist, and then, there are people who are Genius. You are a
genius. You are a master artist a league outside of anyone else I have had the
pleasure of meeting.”
Ellen, Madison Wisconcin
“Your work is absolutely incredible. I'm
sure your probably get tired of being compared to Dali, but your work is just
as brilliant as his if not more so.”
“I just love how the transparent faces
become part of the scene/scape behind them... to me
it's catching a glimpse of their inner thoughts “
“Merci Per-Inge de m'accueillir chez toi ! Ton travail est absolument fantastique !!!”
Tatieva,
***
Interview in the British art site art UK 2007-02-23
1. CAN YOU SAY SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR BACKGROUND AND HOW YOU BECAME AN ARTIST?
When I think back to my childhood there are many things that I recall that led
me into an artistic career, for example, when I was five years old seeing my
mother busy in the kitchen my father asleep on the sofa, after working all
night in an engineering factory and myself wondering what to do today and
thinking I’ll make a cut-out drawing of a jet engine on that peace of paper
from a crisp bread packet or some other creative project. Then when I was
eight, we were living in the country my father was working at a repair shop
miles away in town. My Mother was busy with typical countryside household
duties taking care of the chickens and the family pig. But in her spare time
she found time to paint beautiful pictures in oils and I was totally fascinated
watching her. She was my first influence. When I was fifteen I remember one day
dreamily, gazing out of the window and thinking of the power of art and making
a firm decision that I too will become an artist.
2.
Here in
My use of bright colours is frequently commented on. A typically Swedish
reaction is perhaps that of a young man at one of my exhibitions who challenged
me with ‘why do you use such bright colours in your paintings’ as if to say, Is
that really according to traditional values and good manners?
Others love my use of bright colours and say they are uplifted when they see my
vibrant paintings!
When I once explained my preference for bright colours to an exhibition visitor
he earnestly looked me in the eyes and said: 'You are not a Swede, you must be
South American! I would know, I come from
And when a Cuban artist came to one of my shows and with great interest started
to comment on my works I was struck by how well he could “read” them.
3. WHAT IS IT THAT INSPIRES YOU TO CREATE YOUR ART?
To create art is an everyday necessity for me. Ideas come in floods without
invitation. To create art, in my opinion is a higher level of living, it’s like
going into a trance. Life itself is inspiring, what I see, what I feel, my
experiences, my dreams and imagination it all finds its way into my paintings.
4. YOU’VE BEEN DESCRIBED AS A ‘ROMANTIC WITH HIS FEET FIRMLY ON THE GROUND’.
HOW WOULD YOU RESPOND TO THAT?
When I was young the very accusation of being a romantic would have made me
angry and aggressive. I was quite convinced I was an intellectual with a very
rational mind. But over the years I have realised that deep in my heart I am a
romantic, I want life to be something more than just what I can see before my
eyes.
5. WHAT IS A TYPICAL
DAY IN YOUR LIFE AS AN ARTIST?
The first thing I do in the morning is check the weather and then the light. I
wash, get dressed, eat my fruit yoghurt with crisp bread and drink my coffee.
Then I go out for a walk in the nearby forest, up hill and down dale, never
using the footpaths.
Back in the studio I look around the mess of over a hundred canvases up against
the walls and spread over most of the floor: What shall I do today? What is
most urgent, what would be most fun?
I may lay my eyes on a finished painting: How about a new version of this
motif, concentrated towards the simplicity of a warning sign or a heraldic
shield? I look around me for a canvas to use. OK, this painting is a failure
anyhow, but it contains some parts that are useful for my new idea.
Then I may take a look at an unfinished painting: How about trying a bright
cold red tone for these deep shadows?
I carry on like this until I finally decide which project to proceed with.
At
Back in my paint decorated clothes I continue my chaotic activities. Towards
6. CAN YOU TELL US SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR TECHNIQUE OR THE PROCESS BY WHICH YOU
CREATE A PAINTING? WHERE DO YOU START?
I usually start very freely, drawing some simple lines with a brush or
combining two or three colour tones to see how they match. Then I may leave
that canvas till I know what to do next. To keep my mind and my paintings fresh
and inspired I alter different techniques such as using a brush or a knife, dropping
or splashing paint, even using shoeprints and other tricks.
Today viewers describe some of my paintings as “vibrating”. I honestly do not
know myself how I achieve that quality. But I think it has to do with rhythm,
with the way my eyes and my hands move when I’m inspired. It seems similar to
what may happen when dancing or playing an instrument. When you find the right
way to move you achieve a “flow”, one step or tone leads naturally to the next…
7. YOUR PAINTINGS APPEAR TO HAVE A NARRATIVE ELEMENT EITHER IN THE FINISHED
PAINTING OR THE WAY THEY ARE CONCEIVED. IS THIS INTENTIONAL?
As a young artist I naively accepted the convention of thinking in categories:
You paint a landscape, a still life, a nude etc. Later I more and more felt
that was somewhat absurd, as life itself is not divided into categories. So I
started combining them. The painting “Ample curves” for instance consists of a
still life combined with a nude. Such combinations open lot of new aspects. If
the quality of the fruits is somewhat declining it may give you associations
also to human mortality, become a “memento mori”. I
add the conventional categories of art to each other to build a new “whole”
world.
8. ARE THERE ANY PARTICULAR ARTISTS WHO YOU ADMIRE OR WHO INFLUENCE YOU?
The first “real” art I saw must have been that of Anders Zorn at the museum in
Mora. Was probably about ten … His glittering illusionist waters,
his ditch-banks where I could see every tiny weed, or so I thought, until I
went closer and discovered it was all only a chaotic mess of paint dots spread
over the canvas.
In my mid teens, my art teacher declared: Your paintings lack composition, you
ought to study Cezanne! So I did, over the years more than my teacher could
ever dream of. Every book, every painting at every museum,
every postcard. I was virtually obsessed with Cezanne. Today I have a
collection of about 450 images of different Cezanne-paintings from that period.
At the art teacher training school in
To that I must add all I’ve seen during trips in Europe: Tintoretto’s
wonderful “Susanna” and Brueghel’s stunning winter
view in Vienna, all those Vermeer works shown in Den Haag and of course Van
Gogh in Amsterdam as well as Monet’s Cathedrals at the Royal Academy in London…
9. CAN YOU TELL US SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR MOST RECENT WORK?
Most recent work…Hmmm, good question… I look round at the chaos of my studio.
There are around 140 canvases spread about… Occupying every corner, up against
the walls and all over the floor so which one shall I choose, which shall I
name my most recent work? Who will be the chosen one?
Perhaps the “double exposed” portrait of Marilyn Monroe and a
bathroom scene? Or maybe that of August Strindberg
struggling with his Inferno? It would be nice bringing those works to a
conclusion after all these years. But I get so many new ideas all the time…
The two versions of a
I really don’t think I’ll know until much later what will be my “most recent
work”…if you understand what I mean.
10. YOU RECENTLY ACHIEVED INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION WITH A GREAT ARTICLE ABOUT
YOU IN ‘INTERNATIONAL ARTIST MAGAZINE’. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THAT?
That was of course, very flattering but to my disappointment the magazine is
almost impossible to buy in
***
Article
from the Australian magazine International Artist, June 2001:
"Per-Inge Isheden, Swedish artist
born in Avesta 1937, started painting while still a child, inspired by his
mother who was an amateur artist. Living in a small town far away from big
cities, he had few opportunities of seeing art. Pictures in books and magazines
were his main inspiration sources. A visit in his early teens to the Anders
Zorn museum many miles away made a deep impact on him. Zorn’s illusionistic
aquarelles were for some years his ideal. Then a teacher told him briefly about
the composition technique of Paul Cézanne. He was fascinated and studied every
book illustration he could find.
At the age of twenty Isheden went to
On trips to different cities in western Europe he continued studying the art of Cézanne and
also of the impressionists. He got more and more fascinated by the art of
Claude Monet, especially works like the cathedral paintings shown at Jeu de
Paume in
After working 13 years as a school
teacher he started his career as a professional artist by creating a science
fiction cartoon for adults. During that work he learnt the composition
technique he now uses in his paintings.
He says he chooses a few fundamental
elements, from which he forms a new reality. This along with his use of
quadratic canvases is a result of Isheden’s studies of cartoons such as Dick
Tracy by Chester Gould. His illusionistic techniques, particulary his handling
of the light, are intended to make the painting look "as real as life
itself", quite contrary to the modernists, who want to make their tricks
obvious.
While still living in Avesta, Isheden
participated in group exhibitions. As a professional artist he has regularly
showed his works at galleries and art fairs in
In recent years he has become
increasingly well-known, especially in
He has been described as a
"romantic with his feet firmly on the pavement". His preference of
bad weather motives is striking. Dusk moods with a mixture of disappearing
daylight and neon light effects are frequent. He also finds motives in rather
chaotic places, such as the Central Station or a traffic roundabout.
Critics in
***
Per-Inge
Isheden
Kantarellstigen 64
SE-144 40 Rönninge
tel. +46 8 532 552 78
e-mail: isheden@ishedenart.se