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MESSAGE FROM THE PEOPLE
Reidar Aulie and Arne Ekeland

We live in times marked by war and unrest. People flee their homeland, and the word’s production of food and energy are threatened.
For many years, population growth and increased consumption have exerted ever-more pressure on natural resources. Climates throughout the world are changing, and the consequences will most likely be dramatic. How will the political landscape develop in the coming years? How can we as individuals orient ourselves in this complex situation?

Throughout history, artists have always commented on the role of human beings in the world. The artists Reidar Aulie (1904–1977) and Arne Ekeland (1908–1994) lived before, during and after the Second World War, and they depicted their own times through the lens of a strong socialist commitment. Both artists believed in people’s ability to work together to build a better future. They believed in art’s ability to agitate for political perspectives, but they never resorted to aesthetic expressions that could be described as propaganda. Both men painted their pictures in light of reflections on social conditions and problems which all people face. Arne Ekeland, in an interview, once said that ‘art shouldn’t be at “the grassroots” because art is something that lifts us out of the trivial, out of everyday life’. The two artists took many trips abroad, were well-oriented in European art and were concerned about solidarity in a wide sense. According to Reidar Aulie, one of art’s foremost tasks is to spread understanding across national borders.

In this exhibition, whose title is borrowed from a drawing by Arne Ekeland, we present a selection of works from the Halvdan Hafsten Collection as well as three loans from a private collection. The loans are not depicted in the collection portal, only on display in the physical exhibition: 'The Bridge' (1948), 'The Tempter' (1937) and a untitled painting from 1955.

Hafsten gave his collection of 208 works of art to Stavanger Art Museum in 1984. Ekeland and Aulie are two of eight artists represented in the collection, and we have made this exhibition because the selected pictures depict a reality with parallels to our own times. Can Aulie’s and Ekeland’s political attitudes, depictions of injustice, and belief in the power of communities be of inspiration to us today?

The pictures in the exhibition were made between 1935 and 1971. They therefore span several decades of artistic development for both men. As students, they were influenced by a formalist painting style inspired by French Cubism, but they went on to develop figurative painterly expressions. Ekeland’s pictures often have complex symbolism and reflect several phases of development in the period the exhibition covers. Aulie, by contrast, developed a visual language with direct references to the empirical world.

Both Arne Ekeland and Reidar Aulie had prominent positions in the Norwegian art scene of their day. They also had great respect for each other’s artistic practice. Few Norwegian artists thematised the Second World War as did Aulie and Ekeland, and during the war, the two also had a lot of contact. For a time, Aulie functioned as the art critic for the newspaper Arbeiderbladet. On 4 April 1940, he wrote about Ekeland’s exhibition at the art institution Kunstnernes Hus in Oslo. In the review, Aulie appeals to all workers to go see Ekeland’s exhibition because it is, he says, about the liberation of the working class: ‘I, for my part, have the impression that Ekeland has given me such a beating that I feel hard hit and happy.’


Found 29 objects