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I N G E R
S A L T A A G
Constructive expressionist
Inger Saltaag's (born 1956) art is governed by opposing tendencies:
the one constructive, encouraging a calm, balanced mode of expression,
the other an expressionistic will. The latter is the more prominent.
Barrier-breaking forms, expression, themes, and size characterize
many of Inger Saltaag's paintings. She is hunting for the Dionysian
dimension in nature and art.
Education Inger Saltaag studied
painting at the National College of Art, Crafts, and Design in Oslo
from 1976 to 1980, under Egil Weiglin, Victor Sparre, and Ørnulf
Ranheimsæter. The time was well spent, not the least with respect
to drawing. Bjarne Ness exerted a strong influence on the students.
Between 1980 and 1984 she studied under the painters Alf-Jørgen
Aas, Inger Sitter, Knut Rose, and Bjørn Carlsen at the National
Art Academy in Oslo. Alf-Jørgen Aas was a good teacher, for whom color
was important. Bjørn Carlsen was also very significant for
Inger Saltaag. He was genuinely interested in his students and exceptionally
good at conveying his knowledge. Later, in 1992-93, Inger Saltaag
studied graphics at the Institute for Etching and Lithography at
the National College of Art, Crafts, and Design. Apart from her
painting, her development of graphic media has meant a great deal
to Saltaag.
Painting returns Around 1980, painting
returned to the international artistic scene in full strength after
being banished during the 60's and 70's as dogmatic, academic, and
no longer current as a form of expression. New techniques such as
installation, performance, photography, and video had captured the
public's fancy. Thus the art scene of the early 80's came under
the influence of historicizing tendencies. The dogmatic expression
we saw in the abstract/non-figurative art of the 60's and the art
of political agitation of the 70's died out. A new pluralism coupled
with a multi-faceted, subtle aesthetic was on the way in.
French moderation Inger Saltaag had the painter Alf Kjær as her teacher
when she studied painting and decoration at the Mandal School of
Crafts (1973-1974). The art milieu in Mandal was marked by a French
orientation. The artists Kjær, Rolf Syrdahl, and Hans Kristian
Ziegler emphasized the formal aspects of painting. The same applied
to the colourist Thore Heramb, who also belonged to the art milieu
in Mandal.
The academic art milieu in Paris in the interwar years, the tradition
from cubism and abstract painting which we associated with the Parisian
school, created the foundations
of the tradition that Inger Saltaag grew up with in Mandal. The
secure, balanced construction of the picture and harmonious use
of color were central elements. The orientation towards French
art tradition was further strengthened at the Academy by Saltaag's
professors Alf-Jørgen Aas and Inger Sitter. In the period 1986-1990
Inger Saltaag studied several times in Paris. In the years 1986-1987
she was given an atelier at Cité Internationale des Arts, and in
1993 she was awarded a studio in Fritz Thaulow's atelier.
Scenes from nature Inger Saltaag paints
experiences from nature. She strives for an essential expression
and content. She is searching for that which is original and strong,
the primal forces in nature. She has been spellbound by the vast
uplands of Åseral, and inspired by the soft and gentle beaches around
Mandal. Saltaag's architectural decoration on the main wall in the
Mandal City Hall, Ode til
sommer (1989), is a good
example of the artist's naturalist abstractions. The work is a triptych,
an eight meter long frieze. The picture is inspired by the Mandal
of her childhood, with the sun shining through pine trees at Risøbank
out over bare rock and the still sea! Saltaag's knowledge of composition,
her courageous, picturesque and visionary grasp gives the decoration
a unified, clear, and mature character.
Sangen til et urlandskap
(1999) is one of Inger
Saltaag's most recent paintings. It is a complex picture. For one
thing she has used mica in the painting. The picture has an illuminated
character. The different elements of the painting are caught by
the light as if they were in a showcase. The repetitive rhythm in
the picture, the placement of elements on a white base, along with
the light, illuminated character of the colors all give the
painting an ornamental quality.
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