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Immortal Landscapes of My Mortal Mind 1
Acrylic and oil on cotton canvas
Astri Styrkestad Haukaas’ latest series is a meditation on the intersection of memory, longing, and place. Across 21 paintings, she explores the tension between the eternal and the ephemeral, capturing landscapes not as fixed locations but as emotional and psychological terrains—places shaped as much by memory as by geography.
Blue dominates these works, symbolizing distance, absence, and desire. It is the color of horizons—of light scattered through air and water, always beckoning but forever out of reach. Haukaas uses this hue to evoke the intangible: the landscapes we return to in our minds, the spaces that shape us even as they remain just beyond our grasp.
These paintings exist in the space between permanence and transience, presence and loss. They reflect how we carry the places and people we long for, even when they exist only in memory. In The Light That Got Lost, Haukaas invites viewers to step into this in-between world, where longing itself becomes a form of beauty—an immortal landscape of the heart.
In Styrkestad Haukass's Words:
The works are rooted in the idea that space is a physical location, while place is the cultural and emotional meaning we assign to it. I always want to explore how landscapes act as both external and internal phenomena. These places, whether real or imagined, carry the weight of memory and longing. They are where we return to again and again, even as they remain out of reach—immortal in their ability to persist in our mortal minds.
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Astri Styrkestad Haukaas’ latest series is a meditation on the intersection of memory, longing, and place. Across 21 paintings, she explores the tension between the eternal and the ephemeral, capturing landscapes not as fixed locations but as emotional and psychological terrains—places shaped as much by memory as by geography.
Blue dominates these works, symbolizing distance, absence, and desire. It is the color of horizons—of light scattered through air and water, always beckoning but forever out of reach. Haukaas uses this hue to evoke the intangible: the landscapes we return to in our minds, the spaces that shape us even as they remain just beyond our grasp.
These paintings exist in the space between permanence and transience, presence and loss. They reflect how we carry the places and people we long for, even when they exist only in memory. In The Light That Got Lost, Haukaas invites viewers to step into this in-between world, where longing itself becomes a form of beauty—an immortal landscape of the heart.
In Styrkestad Haukass's Words:
The works are rooted in the idea that space is a physical location, while place is the cultural and emotional meaning we assign to it. I always want to explore how landscapes act as both external and internal phenomena. These places, whether real or imagined, carry the weight of memory and longing. They are where we return to again and again, even as they remain out of reach—immortal in their ability to persist in our mortal minds.
Artwork Information
Year
2024
Materials
Acrylic and oil on cotton canvas
Authentication
Signed by Artist
The work comes with a Certification of Authenticity signed by the Co-Founder of Tappan
Dimensions
43 1/2 x 33 inches
FRAMED DIMENSIONS
43 1/2 x 33 inches
Unframed: 43 1/2 x 33 inches
This artwork is custom-framed in hand-built solid wood framing with archival materials. Custom framed artworks will ship in 1 - 3 weeks.
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“My subject matter is nature influenced by subjective memories. I love thinking about how humans make deep, personal relations with nature - places, mountains, lakes, on earth and in space.”

About the Artist
Astri Styrkestad Haukaas
Abstract painter and founder of Danish artspace KVIT, Astri Styrkestad Haukaas's expressive paintings draw their colors and tones from nature. For each series, Haukaas paints her subjective experience of the natural world -- often painting the same space multiple times as she remembers it through different, changing moments. Haukaas' work has been featured in Artforum.

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This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?

Astri Styrkestad Haukaas’ latest series is a meditation on the intersection of memory, longing, and place. Across 21 paintings, she explores the tension between the eternal and the ephemeral, capturing landscapes not as fixed locations but as emotional and psychological terrains—places shaped as much by memory as by geography.
Blue dominates these works, symbolizing distance, absence, and desire. It is the color of horizons—of light scattered through air and water, always beckoning but forever out of reach. Haukaas uses this hue to evoke the intangible: the landscapes we return to in our minds, the spaces that shape us even as they remain just beyond our grasp.
These paintings exist in the space between permanence and transience, presence and loss. They reflect how we carry the places and people we long for, even when they exist only in memory. In The Light That Got Lost, Haukaas invites viewers to step into this in-between world, where longing itself becomes a form of beauty—an immortal landscape of the heart.
In Styrkestad Haukass's Words:
The works are rooted in the idea that space is a physical location, while place is the cultural and emotional meaning we assign to it. I always want to explore how landscapes act as both external and internal phenomena. These places, whether real or imagined, carry the weight of memory and longing. They are where we return to again and again, even as they remain out of reach—immortal in their ability to persist in our mortal minds.