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Birgir Andrésson
Africa, November 26, 2025 — January 17, 2026

Birgir Andrésson: Africa

Current viewing_room
  •  

    Birgir Andrésson

    africa

     

    November 26, 2025 – January 17, 2026

    NILS STÆRK, Holbergsgade 19, Copenhagen, DK

     


     

    • Birgir Andrésson Africa, 2007 Oil on canvas
      Birgir Andrésson
      Africa, 2007
      Oil on canvas
      Inquire
      %3Cdiv%20class%3D%22artist%22%3EBirgir%20Andr%C3%A9sson%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22title_and_year%22%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_title%22%3EAfrica%3C/span%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22comma%22%3E%2C%20%3C/span%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_year%22%3E2007%3C/span%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22medium%22%3EOil%20on%20canvas%3C/div%3E
  • Birgir Andrésson (1955–2007) was among the first artists to be exhibited and represented by NILS STÆRK. Between 1999 and 2004, the gallery presented two solo exhibitions, with a third in planning at the gallery’s former space in Islands Brygge when the artist passed away in 2007. His late work Africa (2007) was intended for this exhibition and now returns to that moment with quiet resonance.
     

    How do we describe a color?

     

    For Birgir Andrésson, color was never simply something we see. Born to blind parents in the Westman Islands off the southern coast of Iceland, he grew up in a world where color existed first as language – something spoken, named, and imagined.

    • 19 Nils St Rk Birgir Andresson Africa Jpg Full Photo By Brian Kure
    • 16 Nils St Rk Birgir Andresson Africa Tiff Photo By Brian Kure Crop
  • When Andrésson came across a German guide of standardized color codes, he was struck by its foreign tone: rational, orderly, and therefore unmistakably German. The realization was absurd yet revealing: How could a system of color, something supposedly neutral, seem to belong to a nation at all? If a nation could have its own language, why not its own palette? Where does neutrality end and belonging begin? In response, he imagined a system of his own – a fictional catalog of Icelandic Colors. Using the same rigid logic of numbers and codes, his colors became cultural inventions: intimate and bureaucratic, calmly destabilizing.
    • 12 Nils St Rk Birgir Andresson Africa Jpg Photo By Brian Kure Crop
    • 06 Nils St Rk Birgir Andresson Africa Jpg Full Photo By Brian Kure
  • In Africa, Andrésson applies his invented system of Icelandic Colors to a series of monochrome panels, each bearing the name of an African nation. The gesture is both deliberate and unsettling. He is not depicting Africa, but revealing the structures of representation itself. By assigning Icelandic colors to African countries, Andrésson exposes how color – like language – can be used to define, to classify, and to claim ownership. The work becomes a conceptual mirror: it reflects not Africa, but the act of naming it – and the long history of how Europe has “colored” the world in maps, language, and imagination.

    • Birgir Andrésson An hour, 2006 Wallpainting
      Birgir Andrésson
      An hour, 2006
      Wallpainting
      Inquire
      %3Cdiv%20class%3D%22artist%22%3EBirgir%20Andr%C3%A9sson%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22title_and_year%22%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_title%22%3EAn%20hour%3C/span%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22comma%22%3E%2C%20%3C/span%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_year%22%3E2006%3C/span%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22medium%22%3EWallpainting%3C/div%3E
    • 01 Nils St Rk Birgir Andresson Africa Jpg Photo By Brian Kure
    • 03 Nils St Rk Birgir Andresson Africa Jpg Photo By Brian Kure
  • In the wall painting An Hour (2006), Andrésson gives time a chromatic identity: “ICELANDIC 7020-B10G, ICELANDIC 3030-B.” Like a bureaucratic record of something fleeting, the codes attempt to measure what cannot be held, the color of a duration, a moment suspended in language.

     

    Across his practice, Andrésson treated color as a cultural code – linguistic, political, and deeply human; something we inherit as much as we invent. Through the quiet precision of his surfaces, he asks us to look again: If every color carries a name, and every name a history – whose vision are we really seeing through?

    • Birgir Andrésson Noise from Dictionary (admire), 2005 Gouache on paper
      Birgir Andrésson
      Noise from Dictionary (admire), 2005
      Gouache on paper
    • Birgir Andrésson Noise from Dictionary (affection), 2005 Gouache on paper
      Birgir Andrésson
      Noise from Dictionary (affection), 2005
      Gouache on paper
    • Birgir Andrésson Noise from the Dictionary (abstraction), 2005 Gouache on paper
      Birgir Andrésson
      Noise from the Dictionary (abstraction), 2005
      Gouache on paper
    • Birgir Andrésson Noise from the Dictionary (age), 2005 Gouache on paper
      Birgir Andrésson
      Noise from the Dictionary (age), 2005
      Gouache on paper
    • Birgir Andrésson Noise from the Dictionary (aggressive), 2005 Gouache on paper
      Birgir Andrésson
      Noise from the Dictionary (aggressive), 2005
      Gouache on paper
    • Birgir Andrésson Noise from the Dictionary (amaze), 2005 Gouache on paper
      Birgir Andrésson
      Noise from the Dictionary (amaze), 2005
      Gouache on paper
  • Installation images

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    For inquiries, please contact: inquiry@nilsstaerk.dk

Glentevej 49 · 2400 Copenhagen · Denmark
Tue-Fri 11-17 · Sat 11-15


Holbergsgade 19 · 1057 Copenhagen · Denmark
Wed-Fri 12-17 · Sat 11-15

 

+45 3254 4562

Inquiry@nilsstaerk.dk

CVR: DK-31498538

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