Bo Ljungberg

aka Beck & Jung

Swedish

1939 —2007

Bo Ljungberg was a Swedish artist who drew on his training in engineering and mathematics to develop a practice centered on geometry and systematic form. In 1965 he and Holger Bäckström began working together as the artistic dup Beck & Jung, creating works that moved between the studio and public space, grounded in color and structure, and from 1966 onward using computers to extend these ideas into new forms.

Kuber i förvandling (1974) by Beck & Jung, Centrumhuset, Lund. Photo © Bengt Oberger, 2012, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Full Bio

Bo Ljungberg was born in 1939 in Lund, Sweden. He studied civil engineering in Malmö in 1961 and later mathematics at Lund University. After his studies he worked in Luleå on a dredging vessel and later in Stockholm as a technical draftsman, before returning to his hometown in 1965. There he reconnected with his childhood friend Holger Bäckström, beginning a lifelong artistic collaboration, while at the same time establishing himself as a painter with a focus on geometric form. In 1972 he received the cultural scholarship of the Municipality of Lund. After Bäckström’s death in 1997 he moved to Torekov, where he continued to produce new work, collaborated with Jesper Aspegren at Mötesplats Bjärehalvön, and co-authored the book Torekov, Människorna Byn Naturen with Nils Pihl.

In 1965 he and Bäckström formally established their partnership under the name Beck & Jung, producing variable paintings, sculptural objects, computer-generated graphics, and large-scale public commissions. Their exploration of computers began in 1966 with images composed from the standard character set of line printers at IBM in Malmö. In 1968 they created the Felixsnurran, a variable silkscreen system with billions of possible combinations, followed in 1969 by the Girocubes, aluminum objects made in 700 copies. That same year they developed the Picture Alphabet, a set of eleven geometric forms used to generate an unlimited range of images. At Lund University’s data center they advanced this work in the early 1970s, first with black-and-white plotter drawings and, from 1973, with color images produced on an experimental Color Ink Jet Plotter, one of the first of its kind. This technology supported series including Chromo Cube, Tebtunis, Dragon, and Dendra. During these years they also began executing major public commissions, among them Hej patient! for Huddinge Hospital in 1972–73, an installation of fire-lacquered aluminum panels based on the Picture Alphabet, with sketches preserved at Skissernas Museum. By the end of the decade they had completed more than fifty projects in public space, including Cubes in Transformation in Linero and the decoration of Klippan District Court. In the 1980s they expanded these systems in collaboration with researchers at Lund University, producing Chromo Cubes to map color in three dimensions, and began using Macs and a Canon CLC 800 color laser printer to create series such as Shoowa, Mini Flag, Color Operator, Signal, and Dendrabanan. By the 1990s their computer prints combined vivid color and precision with the permanence of traditional graphic techniques, establishing fully durable digital works within their practice.

They held their first solo exhibition at Lunds Konsthall in 1967. Their early computer-generated color works were shown at the Paris Youth Biennale in 1973, followed by international attention throughout the 1970s and 1980s with solo exhibitions in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Basel, Copenhagen, and Milwaukee. In Sweden they became active in the public sphere with over fifty commissions, while continuing to present their work in galleries and museums. Their Chromo Cubes project was exhibited at Pratt Institute in New York in 1981, and by the mid-1990s they had completed major decorations for institutions including Klippan District Court and Studentlitteratur in Lund. Their last joint exhibition was Computerkunst at the Museum der Stadt Gladbeck in Germany in 1997. In 2012 Galleri Mårtenson & Persson in Stockholm presented a retrospective of Beck & Jung’s work under the title The Pioneers of Computer Art. Ljungberg passed away in 2007.