ARTIST PROFILE
ALESSANDRO PAINSI

What is your typical day like? 

I wake up around 7, because my daughter wakes up around 7, so she wakes me and my girlfriend up in the morning. We eat breakfast with her and then I drive her to day care and then drive on to the studio and work until 3-ish so I can pick her up again and drive her home. We spend the rest of the afternoon together, then eat and put her to bed around 7 and either return to the studio or have a quiet evening at home. I’ve always been very disciplined because of my background in the sport of dancing, but having a daughter has made me manage my time better. People say: “I am an artist” or “I am a writer”. But a friend of mine once said: “You work as an artist, you work as writer, but you are a father.” I like to spend as much quality time as possible with my family. 

Describe your studio 

The studio [ed. Northern Urban Art Studio in Aalborg] is a workspace for artists and creatives. We [ed. Painsi and co-founder, the street artist Frida Stiil Vium] wanted to provide them with a great space, and we’ve been lucky enough to create this beautiful community and move into this amazing building [ed. 12,000-m2 premises originally intended as a supermarket]. There are 17 spaces and 30 people working here. There’s also a waiting list of people who would love to work here. 

How do you spend your time in your studio? 

My work here is split between running the studio and my work as an artist. I try and get all the admin, emails and meetings. etc. out of the way first thing in the morning, and the rest of the day focus on art and not get stressed by any phone calls or emails or whatever. Then I can get back to emails in the evening. 

What inspires you? 

Everything. But more specifically, contemporary life – the way we live right now – Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, and news. Is anything going on now? I’m very in the moment. So, for example, when I see a Ninja movie, I want to be a Ninja. Anything that grabs me – I have such an intense impulse to create something around that. Not that a painting has to be about it. A painting has to work as a painting. Sometimes subject matter and painting are two completely different things. 

What shaped you as an artist? Where did it all start? Was there art in your childhood? 

Let’s start with childhood first. Not really, but yes. For example, my mother’s family started an orchestra in the little town we come from. My dad isn’t artistic at all. My parents have always been self-employed business people. But even in elementary school, I did some tests and the teachers said I should do something creative. I started studying industrial design at a vocational school in Graz, but didn’t finish because I moved to Denmark. And my dancing was creative too. What shapes me is time. The more time I spend on my art, the more I understand myself and my creative process. I’m my own shrink. 

Did you have a formal artistic education? If so, where and how much did it make a mark on the artist you are today? If not, do you ever wish that you had been to art school? 

At the school, which was full-time from 8 to 5, we had intensive drawing and painting classes. There was also photography and film. It was an incredible school. Unique. When you leave there at 18 or 19, you’re actually a qualified industrial designer or whatever. 

What and who influences your creative practice? 
For example, I’ll go to an exhibition at Kunsten [ed. Museum of Modern Art Aalborg], and one little detail might inspire a few paintings. Not directly. I process it first. Or maybe the shapes in some architecture I see on Instagram – or the phrases of a song, for example. 

Does your home country or the place where you live influence your art? 

Denmark definitely influences me, because I think art has a different value here than in Austria. People here go to museums and galleries and buy art – way more than in Austria. I used to think being a white artist growing up in Austria wasn’t very interesting. But now I’m revisiting my Austrian heritage because I think it’s interesting to use it in my art. 

 

Where do your ideas come from? How do you hold onto and record your ideas? How do you develop them into art? 

I don’t use sketchbooks or anything. Elizabeth Gilbert, the author of Eat, Pray, Love tells a story of a poet having moments of inspiration while working in the fields – the whole ground is shaking. So she runs into the house and grabs a pen to write down the inspiration. Sometimes she doesn’t make it into the house. Sometimes she grabs the paper on her way out of the house and goes back out and tries to write her inspiration down, but it ends up back to front. What she thought was the beginning turned out to be the end. I can connect with that. If I’m driving or picking my up daughter from daycare and I get inspiration and the best idea ever, there’s not much I can do about it. So, I think: “Go and annoy someone else.” Hopefully, that person has the time to work with it. The best thing I can do is show up at the studio every day and work and hope that inspiration comes. 

When you start a new work or project, do you plan what you’re going to create or do you improvise? 

I don’t plan. I think planned things in art are mostly boring. When I start working, I try to be as free as possible and do what feels right. The ‘planning’ – the ‘mathematics’ of the process – happens as I work on the canvas or cloth. Even when I’m working on a big work. I could never do little sketches for a big work. You use your body in a different way and with different materials. 

Can you tell us a little more about what you are currently doing? What techniques are you working with? Are there very specific ideas that you are trying to explore in your work?  

I’m working on a lot of different pieces and seeing what works, and trying to build up a narrative between the works. I’m using acrylics, oils, spray, oil sticks, and different fabrics, so the next series of works will feature a lot of different materials and media. I’m still searching for the narrative. People will recognize it’s me. But I was never interested in making art that repeats itself. My goal for the next exhibition at Galleri Sandberg is to make the most innovative show possible. I like pushing boundaries. Shocking. 

Do you enjoy reading? If so, what kinds of books? What are you currently reading? 

I read children’s stories! Ha ha. But otherwise not much. 

Do you listen to music? If so, what? Do you listen to music while you work? 

All the time. My current favorite is J. Cole. He’s an honest rapper. It’s not like gangster shit. But I like that too. Next week it could be opera. It depends on the mood I’m in. Plus, when I’m working, the paintings kind of dictate the music they want,. 

 

Do you have any hobbies? What do you do to relax when not working? 

My work is my hobby. I might work on another series of clothes with the fashion designer friend I’ve worked with before. And I have a friend in footwear design. We met up at Art Miami and discussed a project. I’m ok about letting go. So, I paint on fabric and they cut it up to make the clothes. I love collaborating with other talented people. In fact, my one big ambition is to be the creative director of Louis Vuitton one day. But I’d still paint. You don’t have to give up one thing for another. 

 

Who are your favorite artists – past and present? Why? 

Right now I love George Condo. He’s fearless in his process. I like artists who don’t give a shit about whether it’s beautiful or ugly, or whether people like it or not. From the past, I love Picasso – and Basquiat – again because of his fearlessness. There’s another amazing artist Amoako Boafo. Beautiful. He’s an African artist now living in Vienna. Like Basquiat, he rocketed to fame almost overnight and soon got swallowed up by the commercial art world. But now it looks like he’s making some decisions to get back control. 

 

Do you collect art? If so, describe some of your favorite works. 
I have Frans Smit. I have Frederik Næblerød. I have Lasse Thorst. A little one. Ed Willis. There was a time I didn’t want to have any art on my walls. I like coming home to a clean space. But then you get engulfed in collecting. But I might take it all down again and create a little exhibition space here for the works, showing what has inspired me. We’ve never had exhibitions here before. An architect is in the process of moving out of the big central space. So, we could make a house within the house. It would be beautiful. 

Do you enjoy traveling? Where have you traveled to? Has that influenced your work? 
I love traveling. I traveled a lot with my parents when I was young and then when I was still a ballroom dancer – China etc. I don’t like traveling too much right now, because I don’t like being away from my daughter. Last December, Miami was incredible – the sun, the heat, the art – but I missed my family and my base. 

 

Do you think art has an important role to play in the world? 
I think that art and artists have an obligation to push boundaries. To talk about stuff that’s uncomfortable. To push boundaries in terms of the aesthetic and the subject matter. Art loses its role if it becomes stagnant and just a monetary thing. Otherwise, you should give up art and become a trader or something. The Status quo is death.

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ARTIST PROFILE | BENTEMARIE KJELDBÆK