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FOREST PRIMEVAL

Inaugural Group Exhibition

Los Angeles

February 10 – March 21, 2020

JOHN SHEA (American, b. 1989), Notcher, 2019

JOHN SHEA (American, b. 1989)

Notcher, 2019

Ceramic

13.5" H x 13.75" W x 11" D

 

FRIDA FJELLMAN (Swedish, b.1971), Beaver (blue), 2019

FRIDA FJELLMAN (Swedish, b.1971)

Beaver (blue), 2019

hand-blown glass, wood

15.25" H x 22.5" D x 8.5" W

Unique

 

FRIDA FJELLMAN (Swedish, b.1971), Beaver (green), 2019

FRIDA FJELLMAN (Swedish, b.1971)

Beaver (green), 2019

Hand-blown glass, wood

10.25" H x 26" W x 10.5" D

Unique

 

EVA ZETHRAEUS (Swedish, b.1971), Platinum Tipped Light Green Cluster, 2018

EVA ZETHRAEUS (Swedish, b.1971)

Platinum Tipped Light Green Cluster, 2018

porcelain with glaze and platinum (wall piece)

12.25" H x 17.75" W x 10.75" D

 

EVA ZETHRAEUS (Swedish, b.1971), Platinum Tipped Olive Cluster, 2018

EVA ZETHRAEUS (Swedish, b.1971)

Platinum Tipped Olive Cluster, 2018

porcelain with glaze and platinum (wall piece)

11" H x 21.75" W x 9.5" D

 

KRISTINA RISKA (Finnish, b.1960), Qa'a, 2018

KRISTINA RISKA (Finnish, b.1960)

Qa'a, 2018

stoneware

61" H X 25.5" W; 155 x 65 cm

 

JASMIN ANOSCHKIN (Finnish, b.1980), The Mother of Psoriasis, 2017

JASMIN ANOSCHKIN (Finnish, b.1980)

The Mother of Psoriasis, 2017

Ceramic

19" H x 10.75" W x 16.5" D

JASMIN ANOSCHKIN (Finnish, b.1980), Snow, 2018

JASMIN ANOSCHKIN (Finnish, b.1980)

Snow, 2018

Ceramic and glaze

23.5" H x 21.25" W x 13.75" D

JASMIN ANOSCHKIN (Finnish, b.1980), Blizzard, 2018

JASMIN ANOSCHKIN (Finnish, b.1980)

Blizzard, 2018

Ceramic and glaze

24.5" H x 19.75" W x 15.25" D

OHAD TSFATI (Israeli), Moon, 2019

OHAD TSFATI (Israeli)

Moon, 2019

mulberry bark, natural extracts, and indigo

42" H x 38" W

OHAD TSFATI (Israeli), Moon, 2019

OHAD TSFATI (Israeli)

Moon, 2019

mulberry bark, natural extracts, and indigo

42" H x 37" W

OHAD TSFATI (Israeli), Moon, 2019

OHAD TSFATI (Israeli)

Moon, 2019

mulberry bark, natural extracts, and indigo

39" H x 39" W

PEKKA PAIKKARI (Finnish, b.1960), Twelve minutes of the Rain (Dodici minuti di pioggia), 2019

PEKKA PAIKKARI (Finnish, b.1960)

Twelve minutes of the Rain (Dodici minuti di pioggia), 2019

ceramic

68.5" H x 47.5" W

RICHARD FILIPOWSKI (Canadian, 1923-2008), Venus, ca. 1960-65

RICHARD FILIPOWSKI (Canadian, 1923-2008)

Venus, ca. 1960-65

Phosphor bronze and silver

80.5" H x 18" W x 20" D

HEINI RIITAHUHTA (Finnish, b.1975), Lost on You, 2019

HEINI RIITAHUHTA (Finnish, b.1975)

Lost on You, 2019

Ceramic

31.5" H x 118" W

TORBJØRN KVASBØ (Norwegian, b. 1953), Stack, Green Glazed, 2014

TORBJØRN KVASBØ (Norwegian, b. 1953)

Stack, Green Glazed, 2014

Stoneware

33" H x 31 Dia

DONNA GREEN (Australian, b. 1960), Ice Flower, 2019

DONNA GREEN (Australian, b. 1960)

Ice Flower, 2019

Glazed stoneware

29" H x 24" Dia

BABS HAENEN (Dutch, b.1948), Bending the Walls 'Lop Nor III', 2018

BABS HAENEN (Dutch, b.1948)

Bending the Walls 'Lop Nor III', 2018

porcelain, pigment, glaze

23.5" H x 14.5" W x 14.5" D

LOUISE HEDERSTRÖM and CARINA GREFMAR (Swedish, b.1973, b.1968), Ticka, 2018

LOUISE HEDERSTRÖM and CARINA GREFMAR (Swedish, b.1973, b.1968)

Ticka, 2018

leather

LOUISE HEDERSTRÖM (Swedish, b. 1973), September, 2017

LOUISE HEDERSTRÖM (Swedish, b. 1973)

September, 2017

Carpet of varying textures and piles

118" W x 78.75" L x 0.75" D

Press Release

Los Angeles, CA – Hostler Burrows is pleased to announce Forest Primeval, an inaugural group exhibition that marks the official opening of its Los Angeles gallery, running February 10 through March 21, 2020. A Champagne Reception co-hosted by Sarah Harrelson, Founder of Cultured and LALA Magazine, and Jennifer Roberts, CEO of Design Miami/, will be held on Friday, February 14, from 12 to 3 pm.

Since humankind’s earliest creative endeavors, the natural world — its expansive beauty and mystery — has been a constant source of inspiration for artistic expression. From the time of the 40,000-year-old Sulewesi cave drawings, humans have traced, recorded, and paid homage to their complex relationships with nature and the deeply personal and spiritual connections it fosters — the way it holds us in a much larger existential context. Many millennia on, we continue to draw from this seemingly infinite source even as we witness the ravages of global warming. This exhibition explores our dependence on nature, less for the tangible resources which have thus far sustained our physical beings, and more for the way it feeds our creative, philosophical and intellectual spirits. 

The exhibition takes its title from the opening line of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s epic poem Evangeline (1847), in which the poet softened his bleak account of the expulsion of the Acadians from Nova Scotia in 1755 with reverential narrative of the beauty of the natural world. This exhibition similarly asks us to pause and consider the old growth, the ancient roots and gnarled markers that tie us to place, the forests primeval from which we draw comfort and inspiration. 

The exhibition includes works by: Jasmin Anoschkin, Richard Filipowski, Frida Fjellman, Gal Gaon, Donna Green, Babs Haenen, Grefmar Hederström, Sakari Kannosto, Veera Kulju, Torbjørn Kvasbø, Pekka Paikkari, Paul and Paul, Heini Riitahuhta, Kristina Riska, John Shea, Anat Shiftan, Kim Simonsson, Ohad Tsfati, and Eva Zethraeus. 

About Hostler Burrows

Hostler Burrows was founded in 1998 by Juliet Burrows and Kim Hostler, to showcase the works of artisans and architects working at the forefront of the 20th Century Nordic Modern movement, many of whom were still unknown in the global marketplace. Over the last twenty years the gallery has expanded its program and now integrates a full roster of contemporary artists, both established and emerging, with historical works. While international in scope, its primary focus remains in Scandinavia and rooted in the tradition of studio ceramics, particularly work by female artists. 

Of the gallery's recent expansion, the owners note “the new Los Angeles outpost provides us with additional space to present the gallery’s existing program to a broader audience, and allows us to more closely engage with the dynamic cultural community on the West Coast — particularly the artists and designers choosing to live and work there. We see this as an opportunity to experiment with new ideas and allow artists and collaborators an additional forum in which to express themselves.”

 

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