Exhibition dates: 16 February – 6 April 2019
For her solo exhibition at PAPER, Niina Lehtonen Braun will present her new series collaged paintings, The Girl and the Nettle. The works are populated by an assortment of female characters: the recluse, the mother, the nurturer, the carer, the mistress, all deeply engrossed in their task and consumed in their very existence. Yet there is a moment of confusion: these beautiful women are confronted with anxiety and self doubt.
The exhibition focuses on the different roles of women. In one work, a lady, naked and alone in bed, sips champagne whilst watching Fellini's Roma (1972) on a portable television. Surrounding her is a wash of maudlin hues, and at the centre of which, a black balloon floats menacingly above her head; almost a reversal of Lamorisse’s The Red Balloon (1956), extinguishing all hope. Pain and beauty are themes that run throughout Lehtonen Braun's art.
Watercolours, ink, and delicately excised collage elements are the key factors of Lehtonen Braun’s work. Her work asks pertinent question such as: What does it mean to be a woman? How can role models be fulfilled? What inner conflicts arise?
Originally from Helsinki, Niina Lehtonen Braun was the first member of her family to choose a career in art. Her grandmother was a farmer, and the influence of rural life and family bonds feed into her practice. She finds herself continually divided: between her art and her family, tradition and innovation, security and freedom, fulfilment and desperation. These vexations she addresses through her female characters, illustrating the continual challenges faced by a contemporary female artist: the dialogue between the expectations imposed by the art world alongside pertinent questions about being a woman today.
Original text by Dr. Christine Nippe, commissioned for Visiting Artist program at the Finnish Institute, Berlin
Niina's exhibition is supported by Frame Contemporary Art Finland
Please contact gallery for availability of work and prices.
The exhibition focuses on the different roles of women. In one work, a lady, naked and alone in bed, sips champagne whilst watching Fellini's Roma (1972) on a portable television. Surrounding her is a wash of maudlin hues, and at the centre of which, a black balloon floats menacingly above her head; almost a reversal of Lamorisse’s The Red Balloon (1956), extinguishing all hope. Pain and beauty are themes that run throughout Lehtonen Braun's art.
Watercolours, ink, and delicately excised collage elements are the key factors of Lehtonen Braun’s work. Her work asks pertinent question such as: What does it mean to be a woman? How can role models be fulfilled? What inner conflicts arise?
Originally from Helsinki, Niina Lehtonen Braun was the first member of her family to choose a career in art. Her grandmother was a farmer, and the influence of rural life and family bonds feed into her practice. She finds herself continually divided: between her art and her family, tradition and innovation, security and freedom, fulfilment and desperation. These vexations she addresses through her female characters, illustrating the continual challenges faced by a contemporary female artist: the dialogue between the expectations imposed by the art world alongside pertinent questions about being a woman today.
Original text by Dr. Christine Nippe, commissioned for Visiting Artist program at the Finnish Institute, Berlin
Niina's exhibition is supported by Frame Contemporary Art Finland
Please contact gallery for availability of work and prices.
About Niina Lehtonen Braun
Niina Lehtonen Braun (b. 1975, Helsinki) graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts Helsinki in 2000 and has been based in Berlin since then. In addition to collages, her artistic work includes paintings, installations and performances. Lehtonen Braun is a founding member of the performance group JOKAklubi (FI/DE), and she regularly works in co-operation with the performance group Sabotanic Garden (FI/CZ). Lehtonen Braun has published two art books; Mother Said (Kerber Verlag, 2013) and These Foolish Things Remind Me Of You (Kerber Verlag, 2016).
Niina Lehtonen Braun (b. 1975, Helsinki) graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts Helsinki in 2000 and has been based in Berlin since then. In addition to collages, her artistic work includes paintings, installations and performances. Lehtonen Braun is a founding member of the performance group JOKAklubi (FI/DE), and she regularly works in co-operation with the performance group Sabotanic Garden (FI/CZ). Lehtonen Braun has published two art books; Mother Said (Kerber Verlag, 2013) and These Foolish Things Remind Me Of You (Kerber Verlag, 2016).