Cecilie E. Åserud
Photographic print on cotton paper
Edition 2/5 + 1 A.P.
Signed
Size h 37 × w 37 cm
Other sizes in this edition h 57 × w 57 and h 90 × w 90 cm
Norwegian title: Solsikke
Series: Afterthoughts
Cecilie Åseruds' series Afterthoughts is made in a pitch black studio where she captures the essence of drying vegetables or fruit. Painting them with the light of her flashlight.
Cecilie says about the motif Sunflower
“We are all waiting for a star.
The sunflower has the shape of a star.
When it is dry, it has …
hundreds of seeds that can become new life.
In my photos you will find the poetry
In what has lived and the power of transmission”
One of the buyers says:
In 2025, the motif Sunflower was purchased by an employee of Asplan Viak through the companys art program. Now the photo is hanging in a common room for a year, for everybody to enjoy. The buyer says about Sunflower: “Why has it withered? Is it abandoned? It arouses interest, and it has a captivating beauty, similar to how one imagines beautiful 90-year-old women with fur coats and canes. You can see the last traces of the freshness that used to be. It reminds me that life is a beautiful row of experiences.”
Cecilie E. Åserud
Photographic print on cotton paper
Edition 2/5 + 1 A.P.
Signed
Size h 37 × w 37 cm
Other sizes in this edition h 57 × w 57 and h 90 × w 90 cm
Norwegian title: Solsikke
Series: Afterthoughts
Cecilie Åseruds' series Afterthoughts is made in a pitch black studio where she captures the essence of drying vegetables or fruit. Painting them with the light of her flashlight.
Cecilie says about the motif Sunflower
“We are all waiting for a star.
The sunflower has the shape of a star.
When it is dry, it has …
hundreds of seeds that can become new life.
In my photos you will find the poetry
In what has lived and the power of transmission”
One of the buyers says:
In 2025, the motif Sunflower was purchased by an employee of Asplan Viak through the companys art program. Now the photo is hanging in a common room for a year, for everybody to enjoy. The buyer says about Sunflower: “Why has it withered? Is it abandoned? It arouses interest, and it has a captivating beauty, similar to how one imagines beautiful 90-year-old women with fur coats and canes. You can see the last traces of the freshness that used to be. It reminds me that life is a beautiful row of experiences.”