Sponsored*:
I love it when Swedish creative forces collaborate - and the latest partnership is creating waves across Scandinavia! Stockholm-based fashion designer and artist Eitil Thorén Due (AKA Peytil) has teamed up with one of Sweden's most sought after and respected photographers, Andreas Kock to launch a limited series of art prints. I'm already a big fan of Peytil's work, having had a piece on my wall for many years (seen here in my sitting room - Studio Antwerp is similar), but my budget has always been a little too tight to extend to a piece by Andreas Kock... until now!
"Usually to buy a Andrea Kock photo, you'd need to sell your car but I asked if it would be possible to make a special exception for Peytil, just for a while, and he said yes", Eitil Thorén Due confirms exactly what I was thinking! What an opportunity!
The limited edition series is a reflection of their combined creative influences of femininity, fashion and bold expressionism and includes prints like Frida, Stella and Arena.
This gallery wall above shows a beautiful selection of prints by both Eitil Thorén Due and Andreas Kock.
The limited series is exclusively available on Peytil.com until the end of May. Keep a special eye out for Indian Summer and Late Afternoon - these two prints have been limited to 500 editions only.
I have a sneaking suspicion we'll need to be quick!
All of Eitil's other prints are also available directly through Peytil. I love seeing him in action - it's incredible!
Do you have your eye on any of the prints?
I selected three earlier this week, and they've just arrived. Keep an eye on my instagram / Facebook to see which ones I chose!
Niki
Photography courtesy of Peytil.
*This is a paid partnership with Peytil. All words are my own and I only ever work with brands I love and think you will too. Thank you for supporting the local artists that make My Scandinavian Home possible and our homes a little extra beautiful!
Great Post!! Absolutely amazing.
ReplyDeleteI'm happy you liked it!
DeleteI am not so sure about these Niki. Not wishing to be disrespectful (but rather, to open a discussion), some of these photographs smack of the 'male gaze' - women viewed from a heterosexual male perspective depicting women as sexual objects.
ReplyDeleteI like that you have opened up for discussion - after all, art is entirely subjective. Interestingly, I was drawn to, and picked out 'Stella' for my wall because she has a look that says 'no one messes with me'.
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