Laura Vahlberg

Laura Vahlberg paints pictures that represent the everyday and mundane within the context of formal abstraction. While working she thinks about the air quality in a motif. Artist Lennart Anderson once called a painting "a box of light and air." She asks questions like: What color is the air? How does it tie together everything it touches? These questions inform color mixing so that within each painting there is a description of distance.

 

Inspired by Pierre Bonnard's studio paintings, Vahlberg works primarily on unstretched primed linen or canvas cloth taped to a drawing board. She uses masking tape to crop or expand the picture as the idea progresses in order to keep the dimensions of the work flexible.

 

She works on site in front of her chosen subject, nature acting as both reference material and active contributor. She acts as both observer and participant, delving into the process as intuition and perception dictate the direction.  

 

In this context of dialogue inside the painting, a sense of redistributed hierarchy reveals itself.  All of the pieces in a scene at the beginning of a painting are identified democratically only as shape and color. As the picture progresses, the shapes and colors create their own order in service of the overall idea. Often the idea appears first as a formal abstract construction, and then a narrative emerges. In this way an abstract experience happens within a representational field.

 

Fence, oil on canvas

Old Civita, oil on canvas, 2017

Black Truck, oil on panel, 2016

Rainy Day, oil on linen, 2022

White House Early Spring, oil on linen, 2022

Pond, oil on linen, 2022

W&M Studio Art Professor, John Lee, and students in the Andrews Gallery during the Laura Vahlberg Exhibition