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Owning the blues: Signe Ralkov

Louise Borchers—Tell me about blue. 

 

Signe Ralkov—(laughs) uhm, I see my drawing as a sort of development of images. There’s this photographic printing process called cyanotype, that creates cyan-blue prints using sunlight and chemicals. And I guess I relate to that chemistry, whatever compounds my body is made out of. That the images I consume all the time, run through me, and become tainted by this substance. 

 

LB—What about the motifs in your drawings, where do they come from? 

 

SR—A lot of them are images I’ve taken myself, images taken on my phone and so on, but not necessarily with the intention of turning them into drawings. I use images that date back to when I was a child. Finding stuff from years ago and making drawings of them now makes them part of a circuit. Like time is dissolved. 

 

LB—Tell us a bit about your exhibition Shedding Season, how does that relate to your perception of time?   

 

SR—Well, that maybe time isn’t as linear as we think. That there are just different stages throughout the time we experience. Time doesn’t stop when shedding one skin. You move from one stage to another, from child- to adulthood, 

 

LB—and then at some point you return to childhood? 

 

SR—Yes, exactly! 

I still have the shedded skin from a snake I had when I was a teenager. Humans don’t have something physical, like a full shedded skin, that tells the story of our growth, our changes, but this shedded snake skin is an image of that change. And even though it’s gone now its skin lingers with the living.

  • (Left) Evil again 2021, (right) Hissy braid 2021

LB—Where do you keep the skin? 

 

SR—My good friend saved the skin from her pet snake and had it framed really nicely, but I actually just have it in a bag boxed under my bed. (laughs)

 

LB—And maybe you’ll return to using it in your work? 

 

SR—yeah, maybe, it would make sense. Like a snake biting its own tail, the symbol of the ouroboros representing infinity and life cycles, shedding again and again and again. 

 

LB—When was the last time you shed a skin? If you feel like you did...

 

SR—Hmmmm. Summer 2019 I think… It’s something I try to mentally prepare myself for as something that can always happen again, will happen, almost! To me, going through these depressed periods in life, that’s part of living. It can be all different kinds of events in your life. A relationship ending, or beginning…it always allows for you to see yourself in a different light. But also going through illness, minor or more severe, you can come out on the other side, resurrected, with new perspectives. 

 

LB—So change can involve pain, or it can be painful in some way… to be blue, sad.. Does your blue relate to being blue…? 

 

SR—yeah in some way, but blue is also uplifting to me! I relate it to happiness and fantasy too!

 

LB—So you transform the sad through blue! 

 

SR—Yes! Owning the blues! Haha

 

LB—Thank you, a title for this interview! So, you go back in time a lot for inspiration in your work, what about the future?

 

SR—I don’t know, I very much live in the moment I think. Maybe when I go back 25 years from now I’ll realize that a motif I’ve drawn is actually myself. A human morphed with an animal or something, and then I’ll  be like, “oh, that’s actually me!”

 

LB—Do you do self portraits?

 

SR—I use myself in some drawings, or parts of my body… 

 

LB—Do you use yourself in your work in other ways? 

 

SR—I like building universes, mixing real life with my drawings, and creating stories. With the thorns on my hands I imagine a new body, a new way of looking at your body. Outgrowths.

LB—So, you wish you had thorns growing out of your skin? 

 

SR—If they were soft and didn’t hurt people when you hugged yeah! Implants maybe… A thorn human. 

 

LB—If you didn’t draw?

 

SR—I can’t imagine that! I’ve been drawing my entire life. To me drawing also means to be alone. Having a space that’s mine, where I can process my impressions, recharge. That’s what it’s always been to me. Now, it’s turning into something else as it’s also becoming work. So it’s adding another layer to it.

 

LB—So how is it for you turning this private practice into something shared with an audience? You had your first solo at Gallery Steinsland Berliner this past fall… !

 

SR—Good! I don’t think I’m that private after all! I just appreciate being able to share my experience of this process with other people through an exhibition.

 

LB—Any idols or role models? 

 

SR—I really love Oda Iselin’s work. She’s a young artist from Norway, whose work I think is really mesmerizing. She explores folklore, mythology and such which I’m also really interested in. Her watercolor paintings are otherworldly.

 

 

  • LeakLily 2021

LB—What's your ideal workspace? 

 

SR— It’s big! With space for drawing, of course, but also cosy, there’s not really much space for that at my school studio. Maybe, the ultimate dream would be to have a studio in the forest! A cabin by a lake.

 

LB—with blue water? 

 

SR—Yes! 

 

LB—Will you use other colors than blue? 

 

SR—mmmh… I’ve started using red! And I actually use green within the blue as well now. So I’m in a transitioning phase… 

 

LB—A metamorphosis?

 

SR— yes :) 

 

LB—The future? 

 

SR—Would love to exhibit in New York someday! Or in a different setting, by a lake like I did with a friend last year. The only ones besides us that interacted with the artworks were the dragonflies that mated on them. 

 

https://bricksgallery.dk

https://www.instagram.com/signeralkov/

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