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Tate Modern Exhibition

Per Kirkeby

17 June – 6 September 2009
Per Kirkeby Tate Modern exhibition banner

Per Kirkeby is a household name in his native Denmark, and remains one of their best known contemporary artists. His lush, huge paintings, full of colour and movement, draw you into his mystical surroundings and abstract world.

In the mid-1980s, Per Kirkeby rose to prominence alongside artists such as Georg Baselitz and Sigmar Polke, who were pioneering the rise of new painting. However Kirkeby's work defies categories by mixing high art and popular culture with the natural scenery, keeping strong roots in the artistic and cultural traditions of Denmark. One of his conceptual themes is to examine the Danish tradition of Huts in all manner of sizes, styles and shapes. Kirkeby is inspired by 'pop' art, comics and fairytales, playing on the Danish stereotype of the hut in the wilderness by creating a comic-like impression of a hut, complete with kitsch motifs of trees and rising suns.

Kirkeby demonstrates a keen interest in history and art history in his works, with a career including stints as a sculptor, architect, printmaker, draughtsman, filmmaker and writer. The Siege of Constantinople 1995 (which pays homage to the original by Delacroix) is a monumental painting with  grand historical reference, huge exuberance and visual intensity. Soft Lapping of Waves,Green 2005, a more recent painting, shows his ability to build up a rich surface with textures, effects and multiple layers. This exhibition also includes the artist's bronze sculptures, 'blackboard' paintings, watercolours, books, and previously unseen 'pop'-inspired paintings of the 1960s.

Tate Modern

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
Plan your visit

Dates

17 June – 6 September 2009

Sponsored by

The Per Kirkeby Exhibition Supporters Group

The Per Kirkeby Exhibition Supporters Group

The Danish Arts Agency

The Danish Arts Agency

Stanley Thomas Johnson Foundation

Stanley Thomas Johnson Foundation

Find out more

  • Per Kirkeby standing on the site of a work in progress in Lund Sweden

    Polymath of our time

    Robert Storr

    To coincide with Tate Modern’s exhibition of paintings by the Danish artist, the career of Per Kirkeby is explored – from his Pop motifs borrowed from Hergé’s Tintin books to his monumental architectonic sculptures.

  • He is like digging in the garden and sailing in rough winds. But the garden overgrows, the ship wrecks

    Per Kirkeby

    August Strindberg painted such tempestuous seascapes in between his writing periods that the 1890s were known as the ‘Inferno Years’. Per Kirkeby remembers his first experience of Strindberg in the Danish National Gallery

  • Artist

    Per Kirkeby

    1938–2018
  • Artist

    Sigmar Polke

    1941–2010
  • Artist

    Georg Baselitz

    born 1938
Artwork
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