Elisabeth has always liked the stove as a symbol, both for its graphic form, but also for what it represents.
– The stove or cooking place exists in all cultures, even if it looks different. For me it is a symbol of life itself.
Hemslöjdens hopes that Elisabeth Dunker would find new ways to re-cultivate the treasures from the archive were immediately met after the work began. One of the first things Elisabeth was fascinated by in the collections were black and white, half-colored photographs of Swedish folk textiles. The bitwise coloring has been done for future generations to know how the objects looked like in its original form, but Elisabeth found the graphics of the photographs themselves appealing. A woven rug inspired by these photographs, half black and white and half in color, became one of the first products that were developed for the exhibition.
– That was an eye-opener for us. The carpet has gotten its pattern from a small piece of an old textile. Enlarged, it becomes something else entirely. At the same time, the carpet is equally inspired by the documentation of the fabric itself, because the black and white photo became the template. It was a new way for us to look at the material says Åsa Stentoft.
Similarly, the back of an embroidered vest was made to a printed pattern on a sweater. Elisabeth Dunker has always had a penchant for the a tad awkward, things that does not feel corrected, and for the exhibition she has created another series of prototypes for new products developed in collaboration with craftsmen and small-scale producers in Skåne and Västra Götaland. Although Elisabeth loves handicrafts, she has no personal experience of it, and during work became deeply impressed by the handicraft abilities.
– They are possessing huge knowledge and it is cool to see how it is stored physically, tactile, in their hands, she says. This cross-fertilization between smithers and designers, both from Sweden and other countries, has become the main objective of the project. Historically, that type of exchange has occurred to a large extent, not to mention during the golden age of the handicraft of the mid-20th century. Many many objects in the collections testifies about that. But when cheap mass production abroad became the death of many Swedish industries in the 1970s, the conditions changed radically. It became a hard time for Swedish handicraft, and the new conditions have created the need for new forms of cooperation.
Today handicrafts has a favorable climate again. Items with personal stories has become trendy interior decorations and the interest in reuse is widespread. The old deeds of previous generations about taking what you have and creating what you need remains alive. Or rather, alive again.
The exhibition Väva spis opened at Hemslöjden in Landskrona in May 2017, and continued to Fine Little Day’s showroom in Lindome, Gothenburg. Elisabeth Dunker has continued to seek inspiration in the archives and feels that she has gained a more structured way of working through the project.
– I’m thankful for it, and hopefully I can also pass it on to others. I take with me the feeling that art is allowing and that you are allowed to fail. Perfection feels so distanced, she says, and describes how in our modern society it is easy to massproduce products, but more difficult to produce objects with nerve.