Gustav Hellberg Explained

Gustav Hellberg (born 1967 in Stockholm), is a Swedish visual artist who lives and works in Berlin.

Life and career

Gustav Hellberg (born 1967, Stockholm)[1] is a Swedish born artist living and working in Berlin. He has created works in Sweden, Germany, Norway and Spain.[2] Hellberg graduated 1998 from Kungl. Konsthögskolan, Stockholm with a MFA. He has also studied Aesthetics at Stockholm Universityhttp://www.su.se/english/?cache=%2Fstudy-information%2Fstudent-and-teacher-exchange%2Fincoming-students-to-stockholm-university.
In 2000 he moved to Berlin, where he now lives and works.

Hellberg creates public art, seeking for an interaction between people, artwork and the public space.[3] The intervention he’s seeking is a play upon the memories of an actual place.

To realise a work, he carefully chooses a site depending on its qualities, in order to put out a visual and poeticargument that will draw people’s attention to a seemingly insignificant situation: the urban backdrop of everydaylife. The basic function of the work that is placed out in a public space is to change a detail in our everyday lifeand thereby trigger thoughts in different routes.[4]

Parallel to these activities Hellberg is also exhibiting installations, sculpture and objects in museums and galleries. He has also been a challenging debater on topics surrounding events of art production in the public sphere as well as urban planning in general. Hellberg has lectures at the art colleges Valand Academy and Umeå Academy of Fine Arts. Currently Hellberg is a professor at Chung-Ang University, Republic of South Korea.

Key artworks

Important exhibitions

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gustav Hellberg . GalleriArnstedt.se . 23 September 2014 .
  2. News: Barbro Hallin. Konst det slår gnistor om . 5 September 2008 . . 23 September 2014 .
  3. Web site: Homepage . GustavHellberg.com . 23 September 2014 .
  4. Book: Hellberg. Gustav. Vision. 2011 . Featherweight. Libris. 978-91-637-0083-5. 59. 500.
  5. Web site: International Triennial of New Media Art, *Beijing. mediartchina.org/. National Art Museum of China. 28 September 2014.
  6. Web site: Dresden Public Art View. Dresden Public Art View. 28 September 2014.