Texts & reviews

Micro-landscapes
by Lena Essling, curator at Moderna Museet 2022

Survivors
by Tinni Ernsjöö Rappe, Art Initiatives at SSE, 2022


Micro-habitats (LICHENS)
by Vincent Zonca, Éditions Le Pommier (France) 2021

The lichen issue
by Declan Wiffen, Litmus Magazine (UK) 2021

Askoas
by Ashik Zaman, C-print 2021

Ett slut och samtidigt en början
by Alida Ivanov, curator at Konstnärshuset 2021

Flott finlir av Oscar Furbacken och Per Fhager
by Birgitta Rubin, Dagens Nyheter 2020

Möten mellan synvärldar
by Susanna Slöör, Omkonst 2020

Undergången är nära
by Håkan Nilsson, Svenska Dagbladet 2017

Oscar Furbacken på S.P.G
by Maria Johansson, Konsten.net 2015

Sprickor av verkligheten
by Birgitta Rubin, notice in Dagens Nyheter 2015

The Concept of the Photographer
by Annika Wik (film theorist) 2014

Ett mikrokosmos
by Mårten Arndtzén, Radio P1 2014

Söndersmulade ögonblick
by Bengt Jahnsson-Wennberg, OmKonst.se 2014

A Revival of Landscape Art
by Luo Fei, curator and gallery director in Kunming, China 2013

Naturen flyttar in
by Petter Eklund, catalog text for Meken, Smedjebacken 2013

Laven finns ju där hela tiden
by Anna Sanqvist, article in Mitt i Södermalm, Stockholm 2013

Nyromantik en reflektion
by Eleonora Ånhammar, curator at Galleri Charlotte Lund 2011

Miraklet som mysterium eller rutin
by Frans Josef Petersson, Kunstkritikk.se

Master Catalogue 2011 (KKH/RIA)
by Sinziana Ravini, curator

Överväxanden
by Björn Springfeldt

 

“Micro-Habitats”

[…] there is also a question of reappropriating the city as a space that mixes human constructions with spontaneous dwellings of other living species and seeing it differently, ethically, ecologically, in the way that it seeks to recreate a link among living entities. As a new version of the ”flaneur” character from Walter Benjamin: the Swedish artist wanders around the big cities, in particular the more “touristy” ones […]

— Vincent Zonca

Extract from the essay “LICHENS - Une résistance Minimale”, 2021

“The Apocalypse is Near…”


(SvD)

[…] Using complex systems of mirrors and lighting Oscar Furbacken creates an illusion of enormous depth inside the narrow box. Yet, just as much as I am fascinated by the technical sophistication of the pieces, my attention is caught by the cracks through which the expanse is made visible. As with the grave stone piece, these clearly speak of the passing of time and the fact that every solid thing eventually will dissolve. Behind the crack though, there is a new world. In Furbacken’s work a hope about the future complements the apocalypse. 

— Håkan Nilsson

Translated from ”Undergången är nära” (The Apocalypse is Near), a review of the exhibition ”Concealed Expanse” at S.P.G in Stockholm —in Svenska Dagbladet, 27th April 2017.