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Press Release

Carolus Enckell
October 26–November 25, 2018

Opening on October 25, 2018, 5–7 PM.

 

 


Carolus Enckell (1945–2017) ranked among Finland’s leading visual artists. In a career spanning seven decades, he produced a rich oeuvre of sophisticated, low-key compositions exploring the connections between color, light, perception, seeing and memory. For decades, Enckell’s key preoccupation was capturing a specific spirit of a place, whether inspired by a minimalistic, stylized landscape or a state of mind portrayed as an architectural space.

 

The legacy of modernism was ever-present in Enckell’s art. Borrowing from a tradition of studying two-dimensionality, he was a descendant of the Impressionists in his study of light, which he fused with various facets of the abstractionism, ranging from minimalism to Rothko’s neo-expressionism. His oeuvre is rich in allusions to art history, reflecting his deep interest and love of cultural history: his art incorporates diverse references ranging from Buddhist motifs and North African textiles to the ancient star maps of the Incas.

 

Enckell studied at the Free Art School (1966–69) and subsequently served as one of the school’s instructors, and later also as its dean (1988–95). The Free Art School was an important institution through which Enckell propagated his artistic ideas among later generations of Finnish artists. In addition to serving as editor-in-chief of Taide, Finland’s leading art journal, Enckell was an active commentator on contemporary architecture, a writer of many articles on the links between art and language, and an art ambassador who played a significant role in familiarizing Finnish audiences with American contemporary art. He received numerous awards, including the Helsinki Festival Artist of the year title in 1990, the Carnegie Art Award in 2001 and the Pro Finlandia medal in 2009.

 

Artist CV

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