Marit Benthe Norheim, b. 1960 i Norway, living in Denmark, since 1996.
Marit Benthe Norheim was born 1960 in Norway, and now lives in Denmark.
She studied at the Norwegian State Art Academy, Bergen, Norway, a Travelling Art cademy, throughout Europe including 5 months in Italy, and The Royal Academy of Art (MA), London. This led to her living and working in London from 1984 until 1995.
Benthe has given many group and solo shows, and has undertaken several large public commissions in Norway, Denmark, England Sweden, Iceland and Greenland.
Her work is held in the Public Collections of a.o. the Norwegian Contemporary Art Museum and the National Gallery of Art, Norway and the New Carlsberg Foundation, Denmark.
She has been lecturing at a number of Art Colleges and Universities, including Royal Academy of Art, Central Saint Martin School of Art, London, and at conferences and seminars in several countries. She is currently external lecturer at Aalborg University, Denmark
Some of her large public sculptures include local community involvement, and two of them use themes from the female figures of Henrik Ibsen’s writings. The first one is “Woman of the sea” at the harbor of Sæby, Denmark. The last one is the “Rat Virgin” from “Little Eyolf” a 7m. tall sculpture covered in a mosaic of porcelain eyes, made by 2300 children in Skien, for the Ibsen Anniversary 2006.
She has collaborated with the European Capital Stavanger2008 and her current project Life-boats is part of the European Capital Aarhus2017.
She has been preoccupied with the way popular, familiar symbols open up access to the irrational, and has herefore used a.o. angels or galleon figures. When combining these with a less accessible form of artistic expression, the contrasts often produce a fruitful result.