The Morning News

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Currently: leaving you in a K-hole to go play Halo
Today’s Feature: “The Hot ______ of the Summer” by The Writers
NEW!  Latest in Digest: A Partisan’s Daughter

» Advertise on TMN via the Deck

Hanging Around

Interview by Rosecrans Baldwin

Tom Sandberg (b. 1953) lives and works in Oslo, Norway. He has been included in numerous exhibitions in Europe and the United States over the last three decades. His current show, “Tom Sandberg: Photographs 1989-2006” is on display at P.S.1 through April 23, 2007.

Images appear courtesy of Tom Sandberg and PS1, copyright © Tom Sandberg, all rights reserved.



* * *


Composure, stillness, mystery—your vision is remarkably consistent in this show, despite the span of time during which these pictures were taken. Gathered together like this, do you see your work in one piece, a career trajectory?

Sharing my work with the curator Bob Nickas [of PS1] has been very rewarding, also when it comes to his vision of its consistency. Interpreting your own work is not an easy task, but I am certainly moving deeper into the same material and complexities.

How much of your working process is dogged effort and how much a flash of inspiration or responding to accidents?

My work is a major part of my nature, and takes place as a great need. I have an intuitive approach, and each day has its battles and beauty.

Where’s the best light on earth?

Light comes in all shades and questions—no answers.

Very little, if not none, of the material world shows up in your work. How do you find your way to these pictures? Surely you turn on the television now and again.

A Norwegian art historian who came by my house shockingly remarked that I was looking at the television and listening to rock music at the same time. Then suddenly everything turns still. Movement plays an important role in the way I live and work.

What are you working on now?

At the moment I am very into people just hanging around, doing nothing, or standing there looking—these in-betweens that define the human experience. I have always been interested in what goes on in the sky above our heads, and lately have worked a lot with the stars. Flying often, I am excited about the radiations from the big cities and the ocean meeting outside my window. It makes me both humble and hungry.

—Published April 2, 2007 » Email this » Save this » More TMN Galleries
Rosecrans Baldwin
TMN co-editor Rosecrans Baldwin lives in Paris, France. He founded The Morning News with Andrew Womack in 1999 and has been waking up early ever since. He currently writes the Letters from Paris column. His work has elsewhere appeared in The New York Times, New York, The Nation, and on NPR’s All Things Considered. His personal web site is useless. Every month he makes a new Muxtape. Someday his ashes will be tossed off Mount Desert Island. His first novel, You Lost Me There, is coming out soon with Riverhead Books.

» More by Rosecrans Baldwin


TODAY’S FEATURE

The Hot ______ of the Summer

In times of respite, the mind settles, focusing on what’s really relevant. Here are the TMN READERS’ AND WRITERS’ hot picks: the jam that fueled parties all summer long, the show we turned down the A/C to hear, and more.

Heat Stroke

ConEd and Hobbes

Non-Expert Dennis Mahoney explains the rules and regulations of those pesky utility bills.

NEWSLETTER

Prize Lovers Apply Here

More addictive than heroin, more challenging than Sudoku: the TMN Map Quiz, delivered hot, fresh, and diabolical to your inbox every Friday.

» SIGN UP

DIGEST

A Partisan’s Daughter

Louis De Bernières’s new novel confirms suspicions of his narrative gifts. In a good way.