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23.02.10- Public Service Gallery – Oliver Sundqvist
Public Service Gallery – Oliver Sundqvist – Symphony Hour – January 20 to February 18, 2023 – Storgatan 1 – Open Wednesday – Friday 12-18, Saturday 12-16 or by appointment.





















ABOUT the artists
Oliver Sundqvist (b. 1991) is a Copenhagen-based artist working within the field of sculpture and installation. Sundqvist expands on the notion of function and works to stretch materials, form, and concepts into new modes of expression. With a playful, and often humorous approach, he seeks to question and explore the social and psychological effects of consumerism and pop culture. https://www.oliversundqvist.com/
ABOUT the exhibition
Public Service is pleased to present Symphony Hour by Oliver Sundqvist (b. 1991), the inaugural show at the new gallery space. The exhibition represents the artist’s first solo show in Sweden.
The body of work, created specifically for the exhibition, opens up new horizons in Sundqvist’s practice, by (literally!) breathing fresh air into his core narrative. An array of visually striking, large-scale sculptures inhabits the gallery and challenges the viewer’s perception by revealing the animated framework behind contemporary life. When leaning in closer, one can almost hear the works ironically whisper; “That’s all folks!”.
Maybe in some ways I am kind of childish, says Oliver Sundqvist with a crooked smile, while showing cartoon still images that inspired his most recent works, created for the exhibition Symphony Hour at Public Service. The middle frames capturing Disney’s classic characters in action – white gloves, eyes, legs and feet intermingling, swirling and multiplying – serve as a conceptual, formal, and material departure point for the exhibition. In many ways, these frames embody the artistic foundation of Sundqvist’s practice: the capturing of energy, the deconstruction of form, and – perhaps most essential – a deep-rooted interest in investigating the socio-psychological ramifications of modern consumerism and pop culture.
As such, the works in Symphony Hour are as playful and straightforward as they are serious and complex. Sundqvist seeks to articulate the interrelations between fiction and reality, between exterior and interior, between concept and form and consequently there is an embodied tension between the pieces as they – like a symphony orchestra – stand shoulder to shoulder. While each piece has its own, unique character, they create a collective whole when positioned together, each supporting and nuancing the reading of the other – Until one of them freestyles and ruins the harmony – as Sundqvist says with a laugh, looking at the bright red boxing glove that looks like it may tip over at any point. When does entertainment transition into destructiveness, and vice versa?, the sculptures seem to ask. Thus, in Symphony Hour, Sundqvist captures the intricate social dynamics of the collective body, by creating a setting that carries both the potential for harmony and chaos. Hierarchies are being (re)negotiated between the pieces, leaving the impression that the works are simultaneously teammates and opponents. They are all part of the symphony orchestra, but they also size each-other up, like could the little bulky one take out the tall and slender in a fight?, Sundqvist says, examining two neighboring works.
Whether it is a symphony or a boxing match, Sundqvist is its director, and there is a strong artistic intention behind every work. Sundqvist builds upon the foundation laid by Arte Povera, by incorporating various found objects and throwaway materials into his pieces; a bottle, a keg, a plastic penguin. These function as creative dogmas in his artful conception, underlining his aim to challenge and disrupt the values of commercialized society and of the art world. In the series of large-scale inflatables, Sundqvist further elaborates on the interrelations between surface and interior, as he introduces ‘air’ as a type of ultimate abstraction of the void. Sundqvist recalls the process and calls it an odd experience to send the drawings for production without having my hands ‘in’ them – thereby precisely accentuating his intention with the new inflatable pieces; to comment on the ambiguity of the artist’s role in a society concerned with mass-production and surface.
While veritably contemporary in his expression, i.e. by the use of a high-contrast palette and an intentional ‘haphazardness’ in the modeling, Sundqvist draws on classical sculpture tradition in many of his compositions; a bust, a torso, a full figure, all resting on pedestals. In Polar Pals Sort and The Stupor Salesman, Sundqvist comments on the transportation and storage issues maintained by the art world, by combining pedestal and crate in one. In other works, he plays with the classic art-philosophical dilemma; where does the work end and the pedestal begin? And is there even a difference today?
The new body of work, created specifically for Symphony Hour, opens up new horizons in Sundqvist’s practice by (literally!) breathing fresh air into his core narrative: to reveal the middle frames of the animation that is contemporary life. When leaning closer, one can almost hear the sculptures ironically whisper: That’s all, folks!
ABOUT the gallery
Public Service was founded in 2022 by Peter Gerdman, Aleksandar Stojanovski and Axel Söderberg. Sprung from a shared passion for the mechanisms of the art world and collecting patterns, they want to accompany a new generation of Scandinavian collectors in engaging with highly talented artists, from around the world, and at a pivotal moment in their careers.
Public Service is dedicated to shape an innovative program with a global outlook and central to the gallery’s programme is to showcase the most exciting young- to mid career international artists to a Scandinavian audience.
Peter brings international experience from leading art world institutions, having spent most of his professional career in the U.K., while Aleksandar holds vast knowledge on the know-hows within the Swedish art scene, after several years at a leading Stockholm-based gallery, and Axel brings diverse experience from the worlds of Business and Design.
Situated in a former bank, Public Service opened its brand new gallery space on Östermalmstorg to the public in January 2023, following an extensive renovation of the premises, which housed Handelsbanken for over 100 years. This conversion will create two floors of exhibition space, spread over more than 300 sqm, designed by the Stockholm-based architectural studio Halleroeds.
Inspired by a generational shift in the global art world, the Public Service team wishes to establish a creative and multi-faceted platform that will facilitate an increasingly collaborative way of partnering with institutions, artists, and curators alike. https://public-service.com/