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Erik Andersson Architect Office in Sweden
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Art spacesErik Andersson
© Åke E:son Lindman
Gallery 1:4 (SALTSJÖBADEN, SWEDEN)2004 - 2005
PROGRAM Art Gallery
CLIENT Family Olsson
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson Design Team Caroline Löfgren
CONSULTANTS Structural Engineering Thorsell Konstruktion AB
SIZE 100 m2
The 1:4 Gallery was designed for a private collector who needed more and better space for his collection of works by Donald Judd, Remi Zaugg, and Richard Serra. The brief was to convert his villa into an art gallery that could switch from the public feel of a museum to a loud yet intimate party space when required – an architectural game in which three typologies are stacked within one building. Almost every element in the 1:4 Gallery is based on the proportional relation 1 to 4: the light openings in the ceiling are 800mm x 3200mm, as are the sofas, table, and bar. The latter, made
Gallery 1:4 (SALTSJÖBADEN, SWEDEN)2004 - 2005
© Åke E:son Lindman
Gallery Brändström & Stene (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2004 - 2005
PROGRAM Art Gallery
CLIENT Brändström & Stene
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson Design Team Fredrik Nilson Keisuke Kamio Sonja Hechler Julia Eggert Linda Agren
CONSULTANTS Fire Engineering Brandkonsulten
SIZE 500 m2
© Åke E:son Lindman
Natalia Goldin Gallery (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2003
PROGRAM Art Gallery
CLIENT Natlia Goldin
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson SIZE 40 m2
© Erik Andersson
Natalia Goldin Gallery (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2003
This permanent light installation for Gallery Natalia Goldin is based on the geometrical underpinning for Erik Gunnar Asplund¹s famous central library in Stockholm ¬ the fact that the area of a square inscribed in a circle inscribed in a square will be half of that of the larger square. A rare combination of precision, technique, invention, and originality provides the foundation for a simple yet advanced lighting system, in which different light atmospheres can be created using a sequence of light sources. An economical solution that elevates conventional means into an extraordinary result.
© Erik Andersson
PROGRAM Art Gallery
CLIENT Claes Nordenhake
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson Design Team Zahra Najafgholi Andrej Malinin Silvia Las Heras
CONSULTANTS Fire Engineering Brandkonsulten SIZE 300 m2
© Erik Andersson
Gallery Nordenhake (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2006-2007
Gallery Nordenhake (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2006-2007
Erik Andersson Architects have worked with Galerie Nordenhake on several projects, and designed their previous Stockholm Gallery on Östermalmsgatan. The new Nordenhake gallery on Hudiksvallsgatan provides a suite of large rooms, which can accomodate exhibitions of the scale and ambition for which Nordenhake’s Berlin and Stockholm galleries are well known. The ground floor of 300 square meters is divided into 2 connected galleries and a showroom, providing the possibility of a single large exhibition or smaller parallel shows. The whole gallery is
realised within existing structures. All the galleries have museum standard floors and loading capacity. The office and the storages are located around the gallery rooms.
© Erik Andersson
Exhibition for Ylva Ogland ArtUnlimited (BASEL, SWITZERLAND)2006-2007
PROGRAM Art Space
CLIENT Ylva Ogland
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson Design Team Zahra Najafgholi Andrej Malinin Silvia Las Heras SIZE 50 m2
© Erik Andersson
Exhibition for Ylva Ogland ArtUnlimited (BASEL, SWITZERLAND)2006-2007
A collaboration between the artist and the architects for an exhibition of the artist’s work at the ArtUnlimited in Basel 2007. The exhibition is divided into three identical rooms which are lit horisontally by fluorescent lights to which relates to the horisontal light in the paintings.
© Erik Andersson
Exhibition for Cecilia Edefalk (BASEL, SWITZERLAND)2005-2006
PROGRAM Art Space
CLIENT Cecilia Edefalk
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson Design Team Zahra Najafgholi Andrej Malinin Silvia Las Heras SIZE 50 m2
© Erik Andersson
Exhibition for Cecilia Edefalk (BASEL, SWITZERLAND)2005-2006
A collaboration between the artist and the architects for an exhibition of the artist’s work at the ArtUnlimited in Basel 2007. The exhibition is divided into two rooms. One with a painting and one with a video installation of the painting.
© Erik Andersson
The Mini Gallery (ISTANBUL. TURKEY)2003
PROGRAM Art Space
CLIENT The National Maritime Museum
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson Design Team The art group Modern Talking SIZE 1 m2
© Erik Andersson
The Mini Gallery (ISTANBUL. TURKEY)2003
The art group Modern Talking asked us to design a gallery which could be brought to the Biennale in Istanbul 2003. We decided to make the gallery fit into a Samsonite suitcase. It is a scale architectural model made of painted MDF boards.
© Erik Andersson
Studio Håkan Rehnberg (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2001
PROGRAM Art Studio
CLIENT Håkan Rehnberg
ARCHITECTS Design Erik Andersson Project Architect Erik Andersson SIZE 20 m2
© Åke E:son Lindman
Studio Håkan Rehnberg (STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN)2001
For some twenty years, Swedish artist Håkan Rehnberg has devoted himself to finding and keeping his balance on the sharply drawn line where painting meets architecture. Yet, the design of his own studio was one that he wished to address without an architectural a priori and so Erik Andersson Architects were brought in to conceive of a new working space. It was clear from the outset that this was not to be a space in which to view art, but one in which art is to be made. The resulting lighting system is a study in how to carefully combine daylight with artificial light; it simultaneously functioned as a kind of precedent study for the planning of Gallery Brändström & Stene with its concept of naked lighting. Diffusing glass doors conceptually link the lighting scheme to Rehnberg’s art, while the act of focusing
only on one quality of the space, its light, can be seen as a precursory step towards later non-totalitarian architectural actions; the walls were not even repainted. The spectacular simplicity lends the space a peacefulness and concentration hardly ever offered in conventional artists¹ studios. The fluorescent lights are of the same type that is used in colour laboratories.
© Åke E:son Lindman