Ann Eringstam — Blekinge
For their new headquarters, the bank invited photographer Ann Eringstam to create a body of work rooted in Blekinge — the landscape, the memory and the quiet presence of place.
The series moves through forest, shoreline and stone. Through light over water. Through spaces where time feels layered rather than linear. Eringstam approaches Blekinge not only as geography, but as inheritance — something carried, something lived with.
Her images are calm, attentive and precise. A horizon line. A figure in stillness. Moss on granite. Wind moving across the surface of the sea. Nothing dramatic, yet deeply present.
The project reflects on how place shapes us — how growing up somewhere leaves a mark in subtle ways. Landscape becomes more than scenery; it becomes structure.
The works are installed across selected areas of the headquarters, integrated into everyday movement rather than gathered in one room. Employees and visitors encounter fragments of Blekinge as they move through the building — small reminders of continuity and belonging.
Within the larger collection, this portfolio provides grounding. While other works introduce national and international perspectives, Eringstam’s photographs return the focus to the immediate region.
Later this year, a dedicated exhibition of her work will further open the dialogue between the bank, the people who work there and the land that surrounds them.
Blekinge is not background here.
It is presence.