New Works Summer 2010

Konx Om Pax, 2011
Watercolour on paper 76 x 56 cm


AOS III - The Black Spirit in my Dreams2010
Watercolour on paper 105 x 76 cm


AOS Woodcut Portrait2010
Watercolour on paper 40 x 28 cm


Installation view Milliken Gallery Volta Art Fair, 2010

Review in Frieze Magazine 2010 by Jacquelyn Davis

Fredrik Söderberg
Published on 20/04/10 Frieze Magazine
MILLIKEN GALLERY , STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN

This striking collection of Fredrik Söderberg’s watercolour paintings, entitled ‘We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon’, may inspire engaged viewers to question their relationship with infinity and perhaps even dissuade some from swallowing the world’s investment with spiritual redemption or continuing to embrace a detached narcissism. Söderberg’s charm lies in his explorative mapping of self-reflective spiritualisms, as well as in his ability to create provocative microcosms inspired by our own spheres – even if his works may appear cryptic to some.
Linked to the transcendental teachings of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn and Aleister Crowley’s philosophies on ceremonial magic and the occult, these unearthed energies are a fresh discovery for those who find themselves removed from any form of spiritualism. Much like Crowley’s wide array of eclectic interests, Söderberg’s paintings investigate the unknown from diverse angles. At first glance, rich watercolours such as Avebury (2009) appear to be timeless landscapes when they are actually secular perspectives focused on the geographies of meditation and transformation. Others, such as Summer Solstice (2008) and The Beginning of Magick II (2008), are extreme in their quest to enlighten the viewer about the pervasive foundation fuelling the occult. These paintings visually interpret hierarchical connections between energy and power through balanced geometries and the recurring presence of cosmic forces – a massive sun or seductive moon – reminding one of a secret Masonic history or ancient Egyptian influences.
Some of Söderberg’s paintings appear to be more preoccupied with a mysterious means to a justifiable spirituality rather than any specific end. In Mandragora (2009), the artist painted a solitary mandrake root suspended, presented as an object worthy of further examination. For the mandrake root is directly associated with occult practices, facilitating rituals and harbouring mythologies related to its own hallucinogenic powers and aphrodisiacal abilities. In Ritual II (2009), time has stopped and the moment of the sacrificial act – whether it is sinister or harmless – becomes the true focal point. Viewers may find themselves questioning the border between psychosexual effrontery and pre-emptive violence.
Such explorations into the occult remain appealing because this cosmic voyage, in part, embodies and preserves the core existential concepts of modern works such as Albert Camus’ The Rebel (1956), in which he writes, ‘But from the moment when a movement of rebellion begins, suffering is seen as a collective experience. Therefore the first progressive step for a mind overwhelmed by the strangeness of things is to realize that this feeling of strangeness is shared with all men and that human reality, in its entirety, suffers from the distance which separates it from the rest of the universe … I rebel – therefore we exist.’ Söderberg cultivates this singular feeling of strangeness that we collectively experience as human beings. Placing emphasis on cultural faux-pas and exception, ‘We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon’ exhibits the contradictory influences of cultural artefacts versus the fantastic – but not as they were meant to be initially consumed. Herein lies the beauty of representation. The freedom to rebel is often followed by delightful confusion; Söderberg has managed to instigate both aforementioned sentiments, clearing a trail for the unpredictable. ‘He makes solemn claims for his art spawning alternative experiences,’ comments Ronald Jones in an accompanying exhibition essay, ‘especially where the mysteries of life are concerned. In this sense Söderberg’s art discovers new spiritual vistas, while being earnest, proactive, pre-scientific, and post-critical. His art is allergic to irony.’ Perhaps there is hope for the diligent and searching after all.

Jacquelyn Davis

Installation Views Milliken Gallery 2010

We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, 2010
Installation view Milliken Gallery, Stockholm


We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, 2010
Installation view Milliken Gallery, Stockholm


We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, 2010
Installation view Milliken Gallery, Stockholm


We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, 2010
Installation view Milliken Gallery, Stockholm


We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, 2010
Installation view Milliken Gallery, Stockholm


We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, 2010
Installation view Milliken Gallery, Stockholm

Essay by Ronald Jones, 2010

Fay çe que vouldras. 

However, we know that in our desire and others' expectations after some time will be a general reformation of both divine and human things. For, before sunrise, the sky illuminated by the dawn light.
                                                                                                                    Fama Fraternitatis, 1614

Above all, one must soberly accept Fredrik Söderberg’s new paintings as the sacred atlas of his spiritual search for an answer to life’s fundamental question: “What happens after death?”  In Judaism, Christianity and Islam the divine resurrection of human beings by means of a spiritual awakening and transformation into a life after death, is a central doctrine.  And while Söderberg shares this spiritual optimism with conventional religions, he finds his comfort within the realm of the esoteric and occult, especially from the teachings and prophecies of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a complex fusion of teaching and ritual magickal practice that brought together Kabalistic cosmology, the Rosicrucian initiation system, ritual magick, Egyptology, astrology, tarot, and various other occult lineages.  To stare into his paintings therefore, is to see the hand of a seeker, a spiritual artist at work, as much as it is to gaze into Luca Signorelli’s Resurrection of the Flesh, 1499-1502.  In Symbols and Tools, 2009 we see a complex array of iconography including the Rose Cross Lamen, but far from an inert visual inventory, the iconography has the spiritual power to sink Söderberg into his occult trance life as he paints them.  In this painting, as well as others like Meditation 7, 2009, the symbols of the Golden Dawn literally instrumentalize his spiritual search. 

Of course the Golden Dawn has its own history around personalities like Aleister Crowley, the infamous occultist, drug addict, social provocateur, and sexual libertine who the British press demonized as “the wickedest man in the world,” but this doesn’t rub off on Söderberg.  He makes solemn claims for his art spawning alternative experiences, especially where the mysteries of life are concerned. In this sense Söderberg’s art discovers new spiritual vistas, while being earnest, proactive, pre-scientific, and post-critical.  His art is allergic to irony.  Seeing beyond his untethered life, the heart of Crowley's writing tells us True Will is our essential spiritual core as we move from a relatively unenlightened state to a state of pure selfhood. "Do what thou wilt" was Crowley’s moral and spiritual compass, yet he never meant it to refer to the outer emotional self, but rather to the sacred core of personal divinity.  His conception of God was as a force within oneself.  Söderberg has found faith in these basic tenets, and his art thus becomes the face to his search for spiritually.  Why not?  Do you have a better alternative?    

Ronald Jones
Stockholm

Milliken Gallery 2010

Pictures related to the works of Aleister Crowley, from left to right Crowley in his ceremonial robe, Version of The Lamen made by the Master Therion 1920-1930, Magical designs of the Vault of the Adepts used by the Golden Dawn, Lam an extra-terrestial Intelligence with whom Crowley was in astral contact with, Watercolour on paper, different sizes, 2010


Works related to the history of Ahriman and a version of a spirit made by Ithell Colquhoun, and a portrait of a young Austin Osman Spare, Watercolour on paper, different sizes, 2010


Pictures related to the British history of witchcraft and paganism, Watercolour on paper, different sizes, 2009 - 2010


Pictures related to the British history of witchcraft and paganism, Watercolour on paper, different sizes, 2009 - 2010 


Pictures related to the British history of witchcraft and paganism, Watercolour on paper, different sizes, 2009 - 2010 


Pictures of tarot card sketches, and a Tattwa calculator, Watercolour on paper, different sizes, 2009 - 2010


AOS - London 1956, 2010
Watercolour on paper 76 x 56 cm


AOS - The Black Brother II, 2010
Watercolour on paper 76 x 56 cm


AOS - The Black Brother, 2010
Watercolour on paper 172 x 128 cm


Avebury, 2009
Watercolour on paper 21 x 34 cm


Ithell Colquhouns Dream, 2010
Watercolour on paper 39 x 25 cm


Mandragora, 2009
Watercolour on paper 41 x 28 cm


Pan, 2009
Watercolour on paper 22 x 14 cm


Ritual II, 2009
Watercolour on paper 51 x 51 cm


Stone Circle I, 2009
Watercolour on paper 13 x 18 cm


Symbols and Tools, 2008
Watercolour on paper 68 x 50 cm


The Anatomy of Sexuality II, 2008
Watercolour on paper 165 x 119 cm


The Anatomy of Sexuality I, 2009
Watercolour on paper 165 x 119 cm


The Beginning of Magick I, 2009
Watercolour on paper 165 x 119 cm


Treat the Gods as if they Exist, 2010
Watercolour on paper 178 x 138 cm


The Beginning of Magick II, 2009
Watercolour on paper 165 x 119 cm


In the Beginning of 1900 II, 2009
Watercolour on paper 105 x 75 cm

We Pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon, Martin Karlsson for Art-Lover Magazine 2010

Fredrik Söderberg (born 1972) is current with his third solo show at Milliken Gallery. Two years have passed since the show at Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall, where his works were shown together with those of Carl Larsson. One can wonder if the relationship between them is over when one looks at the new paintings of rocks or his great sheets filled with abstract doodles. It’s far away from Sundborn – more mysteriously yet systematically organised. But Fredrik has probably never left Carl Larsson, at least not his own image of Larsson as a mystic. Together with Beatrix Potter, Walter Crane, Morris and Tolkien, Carl Larsson takes his place in the pantheon of unexpected (at least from the point of view of contemporary art) household gods. In the new exhibition, for instance, George Bickham (a.k.a. Penman) is displayed. Bickham is mainly known for his wavy yet mathematically structured calligaphic style. In Söderberg’s images, they are all transformed in shady makovers.


It seems as though the main source of inspiration lies with illustrators, most of them active within or in dialogue with the English Arts- and Crafts-movement (Larsson can be said to represent the Scandinavian eqiuvalent). Maybe it’s possible to understand what can be seen as didactic in Söderberg’s art through this interest in illustration – especially in the sense ”illumination”. Like in the semiotically charged image stories, which seem to want to reveal and teach the viewer something. Many of the motifs are gathered from a distinctly British image tradition, where the attitude is dry, casual and descriptive even when it succumbs to the fantastic. But there are also more extravagant sources of inspiration in Söderberg’s new images. The Marquis Franz von Bayros (1866-1924) and his erotic drawings, as well as Austin Osman Spare (1886-1956), a painter who has in the most recent decades become associated with so called Chaos Magic. With a basis in theories of the conscious versus the unconscious, Spare devoted himself to automatism. His images and sigils make almost magical claims. The artworks became a kind of conjuration.

Söderberg’s art works like an occult exchange between the formal and informal, the tied and the liberating. Steadily and methodically, he has gone from tracing spiritual tendencies in popular culture, via Hippies and New Age, to digging himself backwards in time. In an almost archaeological fashion, he digs deeper into the soil of the esoteric visual tradition.

In this diligent research we can see an interest for the existential and spiritual that transcends the mere recycling of motifs. It becomes personal. Perhaps we can here notice another dimension in Söderberg’s art? Like in the way his paintings could be used like ritual tools. The mind boggles, but Söderberg states clearly that he is not a magician. The spiritual search is rather something that walks hand in hand with a structuring of knowledge that borders on the academic. Hence we can’t really see an artistic creation where the images in themselves constitute residue from rituals (like in the case of Hilma af Klint). But by the fact that he uses all of these images and symbols of a magico-religious nature, and admits that their powers are possible, we can still perceive a possible useage separated from the strictly artistic. Simply, a multifaceted and exciting artist.

Martin Karlsson, artist and writer

Fredrik Söderberg, ”We pray to the Sun and Hail the Moon”, Milliken Gallery, Stockholm, March 18th to April 24th, 2010.

Diagrams 2010

Diagram 1, 2010
Watercolour on paper 5 x 8 cm


Diagram 2, 2009
Watercolour on paper 4,5 x 8 cm


Diagram 3, 2009
Watercolour on paper 4 x 7,5 cm


Diagram 5, 2010
Watercolour on paper 6,5 x 9 cm

Meditations 2009-2010

Meditation 1, 2009
Watercolour on paper 18 x 18 cm

Meditation 8, 2009
Watercolour on paper 14 x 14 cm


Meditation 12, 2009
Watercolour on paper 11 x 11 cm


Meditation 17, 2009
Watercolour on paper 18 x 18 cm


Meditation 23, 2009
Watercolour on paper 17 x 17 cm


Meditation/Stele 7, 2009
Watercolour on paper 27 x 17 cm


Images From Dongyue Taoist Temple in Beijing 2009