Astoria

Published irregularly, Astoria offers space for artists to reflect on life, practice, and the conditions under which art is made. A discursive field more than a magazine.

Astoria is the editorial branch of Sæter Jørgensen Contemporary, named after a modest hotel in Hamar once run by the founder’s father. The hotel still stands, unchanged in name, and remains a marker of provincial permanence and inherited ambiguity. Growing up there meant long, unsupervised hours watching films, ordering room service, and drifting among strangers whose presence was always temporary. That early exposure to narrative, image, and fleeting intimacy shaped a sensibility attuned to the fragmentary and the unresolved. Astoria extends this into the realm of publishing and curatorial thought, privileging minor forms, fugitive texts, and gestures that resist finality. It is a platform for unfinished narratives and the slow aesthetics of consequence.

interview Erik Sæter Jørgensen interview Erik Sæter Jørgensen

Northern Soul

Richie Culver's work incorporates numerous social codes and imagery from the British working classes. The barbershops, the "free wifi" signs, Lady Diana and Jeremy Kyle.

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Into the Blue

Vast swathes of blue interrupted and marred by brush strokes and chemical intervention. This is what greets you when entering the world of Vincent Sarda. His studio, much like himself, is elegant, quiet and respectful of the art and history of painting.

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