Spent a day in Varde. Well, part of the day - I thought I'd take advantage of being nearby while I still am, and go visit Varde Museum and its Otto Frello exhibit.

I think I've gushed about the painter Otto Frello before, but it's definitely something that bears repeating. Because his paintings are just - gorgeous. Seriously, gorgeous.

He's - well, not a surrealist, not really - a fantasy painter. He'll paint a city of porcelain houses in the background while the statues of Copenhagen have come alive and are having a bit of a party in the foreground. He'll paint a landscape with a lake, flocks of birds and pterodactyls whirling through the air, a family picnicing by the shore of the lake close to where tiny seamonsters are frolicking.

And they're happy pictures. The people in them are always smiling, genuinely smiling - not scary, not fake - smiling. The happy child smiles in his nice room, but so does the crowd of people sharing the dismal room next to his. Even the last human being is smiling, leaning on the frame of the picture and smiling out at you, a blasted landscape behind her? Some of them are downright dystopic and yet - beautiful and happy and just gorgeous.

And the detail - Frello used to illustrate books about clothes of the world, animals of the world - and it shows. The level of details in these paintings is huge. You can come back again and again and find more details you've missed before - and they're huge, some of them, and you really need to see them in RL to get the sheer level of detail, because the computer screen simply can't really show it - it's too small (the porcelain pigeon is just a white smudge on the screen :-( )

They're gorgeous paintings. It cheered me up, just looking at the ones exhibited. (and no, [livejournal.com profile] oneiriad, you're not going to add the Sofastykke poster to your wishlist, you've already got the Købermagergade poster, you should diversify, right?)



From: [identity profile] icarus-chained.livejournal.com


Ooooh! You introduce me to some really pretty things, you know that? *browses happily* Yes, some of these are ... so gorgeous.

There's one called "Den Lille Havfrue", a mer-creature in the canal, with a fishbowl effect? It's wonderful! And one ... "Det sidske menneske", where the man looking out of the frame at you has this sly, knowing look on his face, inviting you in ... *grins* I just wish I knew what the titles meant ...

Lovely! *beams* Thank you for introducing me!

From: [identity profile] oneiriad.livejournal.com


It's always a pleasure to share pretty things with people :-)

"Den Lille Havfrue" means "The Little Mermaid", so that's pretty appropriate, really. "Det Sidste Menneske" means "The Last Human" - if you notice, behind her (I think it's a her?) and the verdant, teeming with life strip in the front lies a blasted wasteland of ruins. Dystopic and yet - gorgeous.

From: [identity profile] icarus-chained.livejournal.com


*grins* Pretty should always be shared. *nods nods*

I thought it might be something like that. The Little Mermaid, I mean. Mostly because it bears some similarity to german, enough to make me thing that 'frue' might be like 'frau', and 'lille' looks like little, so I figure on 'the little something-woman'. *grins* Not too far wrong ...

The Last Human ... I thought it was a man, but to be honest it didn't make much difference either way. It was the expression. The knowing look ... and the wasteland, yes. Beautiful. And such stories in them ... I love that about some painters, some artists, how the picture really does tell a thousand words, only it invites you to put your own to them ... And the expression in that one. I keep coming back to it. Heh.

Definitely, thank you for this! *smiles*
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