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8 unique art works you can easily experience at UiO

The University of Oslo's art collection includes almost 2000 works. While some are hidden behind locked doors, others are easily accessible for a small art break. Here are eight recommended artworks you can readily explore.

1. Per Krogh: "The Atom in Space"

Part of Atomis in space showing the solar system
 Photo: Julie Bl?chlinger/UiO

Norwegian painter Per Krogh's iconic artwork covers the entire vestibule of UiO's Physics building. It is made up of murals and glass paintings. Entering the room, you are surrounded by colorful stories about the universe, humanity and the sciences. 

Appropriately, the vestibule also boasts a nice replica of Jean-Bernard-Leon Focault's famous pendulum experiment. The pendulum is not part of Krogh's artwork, though. 

 

2. Olav Christopher Jenssen: “Lack of Memory II”

Photo: Julie Bl?chlinger/UiO

What may appear to be a hand-sanded brick wall in Helga Engs hus, is in fact a piece in the Lack of Memory series – contemporary artist Olav Christopher Jenssen's big breakthrough. Upon closer inspection you''ll discover many fascinating details, hand-carved into a complex geometric landscape. 

The level of abstraction is high, and it is up to you to create your own associations and interpretations of the work.

 

3. Kjell Torriset: "863 Eyes"

Photo: Julie Bl?chlinger/UiO

Have you ever felt like you're being watched at the University Library? Kjell Torriset's 863 eyes follow the library patrons from their individual black-painted panels, mounted across three floors on the sloping west wall of Georg Sverdrups hus. 

Go explore the plethora of gazes and reflect on the artist's fascination with the role of the eye in our cultural history of imagery and the experience of visual art.

 

4. Naum Gabo: "Constructed Head No. 2"

Head sculpture made up my geometric figures
Photo: Julie Bl?chlinger/UiO

Russian-American Naum Gabo was a leading figure in constructivist art. In 1916 he began creating head sculptures built from plates of various sizes. Gabo’s heads are now housed in major art collections around the world, and it is quite exciting that one of them is located at the UiO campus.

The sculpture was originally placed outdoors, but could not withstand the Norwegian climate and was moved into Sophus Lie's auditorium.

 

5. Aase Texmon Rygh: "Torso"

Close up of a white confrete torso
Photo: UiO Kunstsamlingen

In the vestibule of Niels Treschows hus stands a white figure in plastic concrete, balancing elegantly between the abstract and the figurative. ?se Texmon Rygh, a pioneer of Norwegian modernism, created several versions of Torso during her career, inspired by other artists who worked on simplifying the human body.

The sculpture was gifted to the university in 1967 by the architect behind the buildings for the Faculty of Humanities, Leif Olav Moen.

 

6. B?rd Breivik: "Equations in Stainless Steel"

Large-scale steel relieff with 3D effecrs
Photo: Julie Bl?chlinger/UiO

What happens when one of Norway's foremost contemporary artists collaborates with staff members at the Department of Informatics? You get four monumental steel reliefs formed using 3D techniques, which in various ways reflect important principles within the disciplines of the Informatics building.

In summary, the relief "Orion's Belt" is about diffraction, "Chamber Tone A" is about the Doppler effect, "High C" is about tone frequencies and "Fractal" is about fractal geometry.

 

7. Arne Ekeland: "Before Departure"

Part of painting with multiple people in a detailed urban landscape
Photo: UiO Kunstsamlingen

Arne Ekeland's monumental painting was supposed to hang at the Oslo Central Station, but ended up at UiO's main campus instead. In orange, violet, blue and red, inspired by cubism, expressionism and realism, Ekeland depicts large groups of people at work and in interactions. 

Ekeland was socially and politically involved, and behind the seemingly harmonious artwork lie some critical questions about the human condition in a modern industrial society.

 

8. Gustav Vigeland: Monument to Henrik Abel

Monumental statue with a figure in motion and trees and blue skies in the back
Photo: Julie Bl?chlinger/UiO

Lastly, an artwork in the centre of Oslo. Famous sculptor Gustav Vigeland's proposal for a monument to mathematician Nils Henrik Abel wasn't in line with the university's brief, and was initially rejected. After much debate, the sculpture was nonetheless purchased and placed at the end of the Palace Park, close to the University' downtown campus.

The sculpture, sitting on an 8 metres tall granite plinth, is a highly symbolic representation of the young genius.

  • Location: Abelhaugen, Palace Park
  • Date: 1905–1908

 

Published Dec. 16, 2024 1:51 PM - Last modified Dec. 17, 2024 8:25 AM