Leonard Rickhard, arguably the leading Norwegian artist to emerge during the 1970s, sadly passed away at the beginning of this year after a short illness, just weeks before the opening of his comprehensive career retrospective, ‘Between Construction and Collapse’, at Oslo’s Astrup Fearnley Museet. Born in 1945, Rickhard was a painter of modern infrastructure, machines and systems, with an engineer’s eye for detail. The latter enabled his works uniquely to reflect on the postwar, social-democratic reconstruction and industrialization of Norway, particularly in the south, where Rickhard lived for most of his life.
Rickhard’s paintings are typically landscapes, populated by homes, farms and industrial buildings, alongside associated agricultural machines and equipment. As such, he offers the viewer frequent reminders of the overwhelming complexity of the systems and technologies that man has…