CATHRINE OBERG

Stockholm, New York, Paris, London

The secret of  Priceless art

To make priceless art you work with all of you – your mind is burning, your hands may even shake and your brain is working at the highest forms of flow.

You have to cut out all the disturbance that is around you and give total focus to the artwork you are creating.

You have to give it your time, your emotions, your lust and thoughts. It compsumes a lot of energy that is poured straight into the artwork. Time might stop, the wind slow down and even the sunlight shines a little more quietly. When you are in that bubble of life great priceless art is created.

NFT Art

It is the evolution of fine art collecting – now with unique digital art.

My NFT-Collection on Open Sea

MOONDROPS WATERFALL

On the darkest of nights, once every thousands year, tears fall from the moon, shiny drops that travel through bitter cold space longing for earth. They reach the high mountains of earth, far up in the Himalayas and event though it is so cold up there the tears never freeze to ice. They cling together and jump downhill, creating a flood of glittering moonshine that dances its way around the earth.

Make offer at Open Sea

STILL LIFE

And if there still is life, how much strenght do we need to protect it from falling down in the huge black hole? What can we do to protect the fragile life that inhabits our planet. Where do we find the strenght that can protect us from falling into darkness? Still life is enough

Make offer at Open Sea

EARTH

The Earth was born spinning. It rose from the purple galactic sea, shaped as a sphere with the seeds of life already there, glowing inside it. All the seeds need is light from ancient comets to make them wake up and grow.

Make offert at Open Sea

WHAT IS NFT ART?

“Non-fungible token” more or less means that it’s unique and can’t be replaced with something else. At a very high level, most NFTs are part of the Ethereum blockchain. Ethereum is a cryptocurrency, like bitcoin or dogecoin, but its blockchain also supports these NFTs which is used to sell digital art.

NFT art has been sold for prices 390000 US Dollar or 6.6 Million US Dollar for a video by Beeple at an auction at Christie´s.

NFTs are designed to give you something that can’t be copied: ownership of the work (though the artist can still retain the copyright and reproduction rights, just like with physical artwork). To put it in terms of physical art collecting: anyone can buy a Monet print. But only one person can own the original.

Buying an NFT also usually gets you some basic usage rights, like being able to post the image online or set it as your profile picture. Plus, of course, there are bragging rights that you own the art, with a blockchain entry to back it up.

NFTs work are like any other speculative asset, where you buy it and hope that the value of it goes up one day, so you can sell it for a profit. In the technical sense that every NFT is a unique token on the blockchain. But while it could be like a van Gogh, where there’s only one definitive actual version, it could also be like a trading card, where there’s 50 or hundreds of numbered copies of the same artwork.

Some people treat them like they’re the future of fine art collecting (read: as a playground for the mega-rich), and some people treat them like Pokémon cards (where they’re accessible to normal people but also a playground for the mega-rich).

Remeber that there can only be one original NTF – even though it can be copied.NFTs work are like any other speculative asset, where you buy it and hope that the value of it goes up one day, so you can sell it for a profit. In the technical sense that every NFT is a unique token on the blockchain. But while it could be like a van Gogh, where there’s only one definitive actual version, it could also be like a trading card, where there’s 50 or hundreds of numbered copies of the same artwork.

Some people treat them like they’re the future of fine art collecting (read: as a playground for the mega-rich), and some people treat them like Pokémon cards (where they’re accessible to normal people but also a playground for the mega-rich).

Remeber that there can only be one original NTF – even though it can be copied.

See my NFT-art

TRADITIONAL ART

I am an artist who woorks with abstract art in both acrylic paint and oil.

The works of art are created in a special technique that i have developed.

I have my studio in Västerås but participate in exhibitions all over the world.I have my studio in Västerås but participate in exhibitions all over the world.

Tissue paper is attached to the canvas using white paint. When the tissue paper and the paint have dried, I paint the motifs on the board with layers upon layers of paint. Each layer must dry thoroughly between coats. A painting can consist of up to 40 layers of transparent paint.

CATHRINE OBERG

Exhibitions

Every exhibition is unique and has it´s very own mix of people. I love meeting my audience face to face and hear their comments about my art. The energy flows between the artworks, me and the visitors. New ideas and thoughts are born and mixed, vibrating feelings flashes and deep emotions are awaken. I learn a lot from my visitors and together we take the level of art higher.

Louvren

Paris – 2017

Stockholms konstsalong

Stockholm –  2013

More exhibitions
Agora Gallery

New York –  2010 and 2012

Brick Lane Gallery

London – 2011

What my collectors say

“Owning unique pieces of NTF art composed with the skills of a professional painter gives me the feeling of great pleasure and joy. I also own quite a few of Cathrines traditional art paintings. Looks great on my wall.”

Karin Malmsten
Västerås, Sweden

“We have a great interest in arts and are always looking for new beautiful investments to add to our collection. NFT art made by Cathrine Oberg is really striking and it has a special place in our art collection.”

Hans and Liana Johansson
Åkersberga, Sweden

“New ways of thinking and looking at art is challenging. I absolutely want to be one of the first to collect NFT art since I think it will be a new way for art to develop.”

Pernilla Stenfeldt
Eskilstuna, Sweden