Bildmuseet: Loulou Cherinet / State Design
28.9.2023 05:00:00 CEST | Umeå University | Press Release

On Friday, October 13th, Bildmuseet opens an exhibition by the artist Loulou Cherinet. For Bildmuseet, she has created a site-specific room installation inspired by early panorama painting and 19th-century cycloramas. Around forty, four-meter-high paintings come together to envelop the museum visitor in the illusion of an urban environment.
Join us for a press preview of the exhibition on Wednesday, October 11th, at 10:00 AM (RSVP). The artist will be present to introduce her exhibition in a conversation with museum curator Anders Jansson.
During the major societal transformations of the 19th century, there was a growing need for images to comprehend the world. People gathered in panorama buildings to experience circular paintings—some over 100 meters in circumference—that depicted historical events, landscapes, or distant countries. The 360-degree paintings gave an illusion of being in the depicted location.
In a similar manner, Loulou Cherinet uses the circular form to create spatiality that envelops the museum visitor and compels us to navigate the motif. Cherinet has manipulated the perspective of paintings based on photographic references, creating the illusion of a place. She has drawn her motifs from Öbacka Strand, a residential area just a few blocks from Bildmuseet. It could be any Swedish city.
There's something contradictory about the installation; it is both tranquil and claustrophobic at the same time. The space created instils a sense of security but offers few exits. It is not just a depiction of urban space but also represents the structures on which we have built our society. A city is more than its buildings, streets, and the people who inhabit it. It also consists of the systems—laws, plans, and economics—that affect how we live our lives and how we relate to and interact with one another. Cherinet is interested in how politics manifest and express themselves in our physical environment and in our bodies, in how aesthetics merge with social and ideological governance.
Loulou Cherinet has created StateDesign on commission for Bildmuseet and made the paintings on-site in Umeå. The exhibition is produced by Bildmuseet.
Loulou Cherinet (b. 1970, Gothenburg), based in Stockholm, is primarily known for working with spatial installations for film and moving images, often in interdisciplinary collaborations. She received her education at Addis Abeba University School of Fine Art & Design and the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm. Today a professor of fine art at Konstfack, she has held solo exhibitions in Stockholm, Gothenburg, Addis Ababa, Prague, Krakow, Lüneburg, and Jakarta. Her works have been showcased at art biennials in places such as São Paulo, Venice, Bamako, and Sydney, as well as Manifesta 8 and Momentum 7.
PRESS IMAGES: www.bildmuseet.umu.se/en/press...
PRESS PREVIEW: Wednesday 11 October at 10:00 AM (RSVP)
Loulou Cherinet will present her exhibition in conversation with museum curator Anders Jansson.
EXHIBITION OPENING: Art Friday 13 October at 5:00 – 12:00 PM
Presentation of the exhibition at 7:00 PM by Loulou Cherinet and Anders Jansson. Guided tours, creative workshop, performance by artist Irina Laaja, restaurant, bar, and a DJ.
Contact Information
Anders Jansson, Museum Curator
anders.jansson@umu.se, +46 90-7869110
Helena Vejbrink, Press Contact
helena.vejbrink@bildmuseet.umu.se, +46 90-7869073
Contacts
General Press InquiriesPress Officer
Tel:+46 90 786 50 89press@umu.seImages
About us
Umeå University is a comprehensive university and one of Sweden’s largest higher education institutions with around 38,000 students and 4,600 staff. We have a diverse range of high-quality educational programmes and research within all disciplinary domains and the arts. The University offers world-class educational and research environments and helps expand knowledge of global significance. This is where the groundbreaking discovery was made of the CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing tool, which was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. At Umeå University, everything is just around the corner. Our tightly knit campus makes it easy to meet, collaborate and share knowledge, something that encourages a dynamic and open culture.
Subscribe to releases from Umeå University
Subscribe to all the latest releases from Umeå University by registering your e-mail address below. You can unsubscribe at any time.
Latest releases from Umeå University
The protein that helps cancer cells survive treatment7.4.2026 08:00:00 CEST | Press Release
Researchers at Umeå University have contributed new insights into how cancer cells protect themselves from cell death. The study provides a deeper understanding of how key proteins interact within the cell and could, in the long term, support the development of new cancer therapies.
Capsule technology opens new window into individual cells12.3.2026 09:00:00 CET | Press Release
Researchers have developed a capsule-based method that makes it possible to analyse the same cell through multiple experimental steps. The technology overcomes a long-standing limitation in cell research and could open new ways to study disease mechanisms at the single-cell level.
Who holds the power when AI enters our lives?25.2.2026 14:05:00 CET | Press Invitation
In a major new exhibition at Bildmuseet, international artists examine the rapid technological development shaping contemporary life. AI and the Paradox of Agency opens on 13 March, with presentations, performances, film screenings, creative workshops and more, continuing until midnight. Members of the press are invited to book preview visits and interviews on 10 and 11 March.
Swedish Picture Book of the Year / Where’s My Egg?25.2.2026 14:00:00 CET | Press Invitation
Julia Groth’s Var är mitt ägg? has been named the Swedish Picture Book of the Year. On 13 March, in conjunction with the award ceremony at Littfest – Umeå International Literature Festival, Bildmuseet opens an exhibition of the original illustrations from the winning book. Press previews by appointment.
Reshaping gold leads to new electronic and optical properties2.2.2026 08:10:00 CET | Press Release
By changing the physical structure of gold at the nanoscale, researchers can drastically change how the material interacts with light – and, as a result, its electronic and optical properties. This is shown by a study from Umeå University published in Nature Communications.
In our pressroom you can read all our latest releases, find our press contacts, images, documents and other relevant information about us.
Visit our pressroom
