
Moa Israelsson
Fish Trap, 2018
Iron, acrylic composite and acrylic
122h x 110w x 21d cm
48.03h x 43.31w x 8.27d inches
MI005
Moa Israelsson
Roots, 2017
Iron, wire, acrylic composite, acrylic and hemp
58h x 25w x 7d cm
22.83h x 9.84w x 2.76d inches
MI008
Moa Israelsson
Cutlery, 2019
Wire, rubber, foam rubber, acrylic composite and acrylic
Different size for each piece
MI011
Moa Israelsson
Solid Sleep, 2019
Silk, latex, padding and raw leather
280h x 60w x 35d cm
110.24h x 23.62w x 13.78d inches
MI013
Moa Israelsson
Solid Sleep, 2019
Silk, latex, padding and raw leather
160h x 40w x 27d cm
62.99h x 15.75w x 10.63d inches
MI012
Moa Israelsson
Baby Blanket, 2019
Silk, latex, padding and raw leather
90h x 70w cm
35.43h x 27.56w inches
MI016
Moa Israelsson
Untitled, 2019
Linen, skin and latex
107h x 80w cm
42.13h x 31.50w inches
MI021
Installation view Moa Israelsson, Go, Gone, 2019
Photo: Per-Erik Adamsson
Born in Ljungby 1982 I Lives and works in Åkers Styckebruk, Sweden.
Spirituality, folklore, and occult attributes. Isolation, melancholy, and decay. Born out of an interest in rural America, the wilderness, and what could be described as the dark sides of American culture, Moa Israelsson examines a borderland between reality and fiction. In some sense, her process borders on sociological methodology. With a restrained and evocative expression, Israelsson evokes hard-to-define depopulated communities, often inhospitable and occasionally frightening, which become venues where alienation is depicted with dystopian design. With unparalleled craftsmanship and materials such as rebar, polyester, acrylic, and polyurethane composite plastics, she produces work with striking naturalism. But in the realistic depictions of amulets and talismans, Israelsson occasionally reveals their components. A glimpse of rebar here, of steel wire there. The illusion is shattered and becomes an analogy for the fiction that seeps into reality.
Israelsson studied at the Royal University College of Fine Arts, Stockholm, 2005–2010, and at Konstskolan Idun Lovén, Stockholm 2002–2005. Her works have been exhibited extensively in various solo- and group exhibitions. She has received several grants, such as Stiftelsen Marianne and Sigvards Bernadottes Konstnärsfond, 2013 and Konstnärsnämndens work grant, 2014 and 2018. Her works are included in both private and public collections.