All posts tagged: Ingmar Järve

Ingmar Järve aka Gutface: “Street Gnomes” in Porto

Ingmar Järve aka Gutface: “Street Gnomes” in Porto

In the bustling street art/graffiti scene of Porto, Portugal, a fresh wave of new pieces informed by folklore gives rise to “Street Gnomes,” a captivating solo exhibition by the Estonian street artist Gutface, also known as Ingmar Järve.

Hosted by Circus Network, this show, funded by the EU, the Goethe-Institut, and the Estonian Embassy in Lisbon, runs until April 11, 2024, offering an intimate glimpse into the lives of mythical beings reimagined for the urban jungle – imbued with a certain warmth that may make you nostalgic for a time you never lived through. Gutface, a Tartu-based freelance artist, illustrator, and graphic designer, brings his personal tour de force to Portugal after entertaining audiences across Europe with the Stencibility Street Art Festival and his vibrant contributions to the collective @ajuokse.

Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Kadri Lind)

“Street Gnomes” looks to redefine the gnome, a figure steeped in European folklore, traditionally seen as a guardian of the earth and its hidden treasures. Gutface often transposes these mythical guardians from their idyllic garden settings to the concrete sprawl, where they embody the spirit and toil of unseen urban caretakers: the road workers, electricians, plumbers, and garbage collectors who keep our cities seamless and functioning. The artist experiments and succeeds with various mediums; through a mix of ceramics, tufted carpets, risography, and bold speckled street art, the exhibition highlights a symbiosis between nature and urbanity.

Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Kadri Lind)

At the heart of this exhibition is a narrative and a style that merges the raw energy of street art with less obvious storytelling. Järve invites us on a journey through the city’s veins, where every corner and crevice is alive with the silent hustle of its gnomish caretakers. “Street Gnomes” may also strike one as a testament to the transformative power of street art and a celebration of those who labor in the shadows, ensuring our urban ecosystems and imaginations thrive. Gutface’s work, deeply rooted in the vibrant street culture and community-driven ethos of Tartu, Estonia, connects the fantastical with the mundane, inviting viewers to reconsider the sources of that magic pulsing through the city’s concrete heart.

Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Kadri Lind)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
Gutface aka Ingmar Järve. “Street Gnomes”. Circus Network Gallery. Porto, Portugal. (photo © Sofia Borba)
“Street Gnomes” is open until April 11th at Circus Network (Porto, Portugal). The collaborators and partners are Krasta Keramika, Kuues Planeet, and Not So Fast Press. The exhibition was produced by Kadri Lind (Stencibility, Urban Festival UIT). The project is funded by the European Union, Goethe-Institut, and the Estonian Embassy in Lisbon. (photo © Sofia Borba)
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Gutface and “Snake King of Kadrina” in Estonia

Gutface and “Snake King of Kadrina” in Estonia

Graphic designer, video animator, illustrator, and artist Ingmar Järve also has done a fair share of illegal street art and legal walls at GUTFACE in the last few years – including participating in Estonia’s Rural Urban Art festival, which focuses on small towns there.

The opening sketch from Gutface. “Snake King Of Kadrina”. Kadrina, Estonia. (photo © Ingmar Järve)
Gutface. “Snake King Of Kadrina”. Kadrina, Estonia. (photo © Ingmar Järve)

Last year he quit his job in advertising and went on his own away from Estonia’s capital of Tallinn on the Gulf of Finland to pursue a professional career solo in Tartu, a couple of hours southeast. Tartu is also where the Stencibility festival has run for a decade and the street art scene is more lively. He shows us this new mural he created for the local municipality of a small town in the north of Estonia called Kadrina.

“The artwork is inspired by an Estonian folklore character which I interpreted and illustrated,” he says, and you can tell he is proud of the clean lines and curving forms that refer to historical storytelling – as well as their similarity to current tattoo, skater and signage styles.

He calls it “Snake King of Kadrina”.

Gutface. “Snake King Of Kadrina”. Kadrina, Estonia. (photo © Ingmar Järve)
Gutface. “Snake King Of Kadrina”. Kadrina, Estonia. (photo © Ingmar Järve)
Gutface. “Snake King Of Kadrina”. Kadrina, Estonia. (photo © Ingmar Järve)

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