Artist
Tine Bek
Tine Bek (born in 1988) is a Danish visual artist who works with video, photography and sculpture. She studied History before graduating from Fatamorgana – The Danish School of art Photography and Glasgow School of Art, where she holds a Master degree in Fine Art Photography.
Bek has exhibited in Denmark, UK, Norway, Lithuania, Germany and USA among others, and has participated in various international residencies including; Palazzo Monti, Numeroventi, Casa Balandra to name a few.
Bek is represented in Madrid by Dust and Soul and in New York by Picture Room. In 2022 her first book; The Vulgarity of Being Three-Dimensional was published with Disko Bay. The book has been awarded with the Hasselblad Foundation's Photo Book
Grant 2021.
Bek lived in Glasgow from 2013-18 where she co founded the gallery 16 Nicholson street alongside a series of self published books highlighting the works of emerging artists internationally. Hereby shaping a conceptual hybrid, transgressing conversations about identity and universality, existentialism and particularism. Today Bek is based in Copenhagen.
The Vulgarity of Being Three-Dimensional
The Vulgarity of Being Three-Dimensional is a photographic work which was published as a monograph in 2022 by the Danish publishing house Disko Bay. In this work Bek tries to escape strict hierarchical structures through a series of aesthetic experiments. The book presents images of shapes that run over, flow, crumble and bulge out. An excess of uncontrolled forms that in the sculptural tradition have been dismissed as vulgar or possibly baroque.
“Vulgarity, from the Latin term vulgus, was the term for common people, an insinuation of the ordinary. We consider the vulgar to be crude, below our station, brash, crass, rough – terms that are charged with ill interest, with gall, with remorse. What if vulgar was not a bad thing at all, merely a removal of a mask. The slipperiness of expectation slinking away? - Words from the text ‘Within the commonality lies the sparkling truth’ by Isabella Rose Celeste Davey
The works take a closer look at our dependence on certain shapes and materials. This focuses on the temporary, and becomes an image of an urge to control and tame certain materials and bodies around us. The work explores ideas about form and function in connection with the photographed image. What happens to the object when it is photographed, and which has the most power, the image of the subject or the
subject itself?
The photographic project is a mix of still life, other found forms and created sculptural forms photographed. Fruit, material, fabric and figures are brought together and changed by subtle shades of colour. Bek’s photography tends to seem uneasy, as if something might go wrong. Her images impose a sense of discomfort, little cracks beneath the surface. It is through these minutiae ruptures in the surfaces she exposes that a material hierarchy forms – is marble better than foam? Does a stone fountain overshadow a bathroom tap? – she asks you to scratch through the surface and to see what’s behind.
Iben Gad's work deals with identity and personal stories - though based in the documentary field, she has a remarkably quirky take on the discipline which deserves a certain attention. Her project about bullying, To the Unpopular Girls, shows personal courage and a refreshing multimedia approach to photojournalism.
Inuuteq Storch, based in Sisimiut, Greenland, makes work about his homeland that radiates a sensitivity to identity, human relations and belonging. His poetic imagery offers an uncensored portrait of a culture which for many centuries has been dominated by outsiders' perspective.
Luna Scales stands out for her persistent and kaleidoscopic investigation of the human body through photography and video performance. She is occupied with the codex between the viewer and the objectified body - and how language and the gaze become the defining measurement for perfection and beauty.
Oscar Scott Carl, a recent graduate of Photojournalism, is already a convincing visual storyteller. The core of his photographic practice is to engulf himself in long-term projects which reflect upon social injustice and transition in human relations.
Tina Bek's personal practice is complemented by commissions for the fashion industry: a combination that lends her the ability to create harmonic compositions. However beautiful, the beauty she conveys is often dislocated, forcing viewers' to recalibrate their expectations.