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Inanimate objects speak through Sigrid`s work

The artist Sigrid Boseley has a world of her own.
That world is to be found two floors up in a block of flats in Västerås. There in the two apartments, which accommodate both living quarters and studio, she calls upon her inanimate objects to embody life and the great world outside.
Her favourite objects are stones, dolls and logs of wood.
The stones are important. They lie all over the place in the studio. Big and small, smooth and rough, shining and dull, simple and extraordinary.
For Sigrid Boseley they are all of value and have something to tell.
'It`s difficult to explain, but they are personalities in their own right and have a lot to say for themselves.'

Logs of wood

She has been fascinated by stones for a long time. Her interest in logs of wood is more recent. They are portrayed in the paintings that hang on the walls and stand carefully arranged for a new picture. Sigrid discovered them during a visit to Värmland.
'We were sitting in front of ann open fire when I suddenly began to look more closely at the firewood. Then I felt I couldn´t let that log be burnt up, nor that one, nor that one. I had to paint them instead. Although it´s not the actual, visual preserving of them that is important. The stones themselves, for example, will last almost forever.'
She finds most of the stones on the south coast of England, where she often goes with her husband to visit her parents-in-law.
Sigrid looks into the cardboard boxes on the floor and says with a smile: 'I wonder what the customs would say if they stopped us with all these. Luckily they´ve never done so.'
It was in the middle of the seventies that Sigrid Boseley arranged her artisic life as it is today. She has been to evening classes and felt that she had received enough outside influences and must now develop what was really 'hers'. As a member of Bild & Form, she has had one-man exhibitions and taken part in joint exhibitions, but her art hes not been sufficiently lucrative to live on.
'No, we manage thanks to my husband who is a techer at the university,' she explains, adding half jokingly, 'He is my patron.'

Leaves impression on home

And thet her husband is interested in Sigrid`s art is no doubt a prerequisite, since it undeniably leaves its impression on the flat. In the living-room stones lie on the table, Chinese dolls look down from sveral of paintings on the wall, and in the study, kitchen and bedroom there are examples of Sigrid Boseley`s work, which also includes drawings and poems. The free-flowing lines of the sketch-like drawings contrast sharply with the bright colours and almost photographic realism of the paintings. They are a way of unwinding, andinspiration often comes instantaneously. Just as with the poems.
'I can be sitting watching a fly that is wlking about on the table. Then I begin to ponder about what the fly actually thinks when it sees its reflection in the shining oil cloth and this result in a poem.
'with my oil painting it´s different. Instinctively I feel what wants to be painted. I then try putting the object together with other ones until new forms arise.'
After a tour round Sigrid Boseley`s flat one thing becomes clear: everything that is depicted is also to be found in the material world of the flat. The stones and logs, of course,but inside the kitchen cupboard there are also the piggy-bank, the beautiful teapot and the Chinese dolls with their shining colours. One of the few paintings in which Sigrid has portrayd a human being is a self-portrait painted immediately after a masqurade. Yes, of course, she can produce the mask she is wearing in the picture. Everything she paints exists in reality. Somewhere in the flat or in the studio.

Close to life

What is her art apart from painting objects she is fascinated by?
'I paint what is close to life, close to nature. One of my poems explains this quite well. It ends: "And once again forgive me, I fly to tuch the ground.'"
It is not then the big events, nor the "important" motifs that Sigrid Boseley gives her attention to. It is to the inanimate objects and shapes whixh at first glance do not seem particularly remarkable, but which in her eyes have a value, a beauty or a sensuality lying deep within them. There is never any doubt about what she is going to paint.
'I´m not afraid of repeating myself. St the moment the dolls have not been asserting themselves, it is the stones and the logs that are important.'

Her own world

On saying this Sigrid Boseley looks longingly down at her collection from the English south coast. She would really like to paint much bigger stones, but it is not possible to get them home, and to paint them out in the open would not feel natural to her.
'No, I like it best in this room; it´s my own world.'

Birgitta Hedman

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I feel dead on my wings to sorrow
flying low
bowing my head to fathom
the tiniest, withering flower
and once again forgive me
I fly to tuch the ground

Poem by Sigrid Boseley

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Sigrid Boseley
Born in 1945 in Stockholm.

 

 

address: Vegagatan 4b, SE-722 23 Västerås, Sweden
tel: +46(0)21-13 06 96
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Member of Bild & Form [Image & Form], 1978-1998
Currently a member of Västerås Artists` Association
Member of Västerås Writers` Club

Education:
Art classes at Oxford College of Technology, England, 1966-67
Art classes at Bedford College of Further Education, England, 1968
Art Classes at ABF [The Workers` Educational Association], Västerås, 1969

Joint Exhibitions:
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1974
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1975
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1976
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1978
Västerås Art Museum, 'New from the Studio', 1980
Rönnbygården, Rönnby (Västerås suburb), 1980
Gallery Ugglan [Owl], Strängnäs (cathedral city), 1980
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1980
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1980
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1982
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1984
Gallery Gripen [Griffin], Karlstad (provincial capitol of Värmland), 1986
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1986
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1987
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1989
Arosgården (it is the house of the Workers` Educational Association), Västerås 198?
Abrahamsgården, Norberg, (small town in the county of Västmanland), 1990
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1990
Västerås Art Museum, Christmas Salon, 1992
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1996
Västerås Artists` Association, 1999
Västerås Artists` Association, 2000

One-man Exhibitions:
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1979
Gallery Bild & Form, Västerås, 1982
Konstfrämjandet (an association for the promotion of art), Västerås, 1985
Arbetsförmedlingen [Employment Exchange], Västerås 1990
Stadsbiblioteket [Town Library], Västerås, 1998

Cultural Award:
Västerås City cultural Award, 1983

 

 

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