Ingrained: Stories Carved in Wood explores woodwork from the late 17th to early 19th centuries—a period when wood became the primary medium in Northern Europe used to express identity, belief, and skill.
Techniques like chip carving, pyrography, and painted rosemaling were more than decoration; they were how craftspeople signed their voice into the wood, shaped by their region, their family traditions, and the tools passed down to them.
A dowry chest spoke of a marriage. A ritual bowl spoke of a harvest. A carved symbol above a doorway was a wish for safety, prosperity, or protection from what couldn't be seen.
Ingrained gathers these stories from the countryside and homes of Scandinavia, spanning the late 17th to early 19th centuries. The pieces on display—storage chests, bridal gifts, ale bowls, and decorative furnishings—reveal a culture that didn't separate the useful from the beautiful. To the people who made and used these objects, an item could be both at once: a bowl to hold ale, and a story to hold a blessing.
Ingrained is possible through the donation of artifacts from the collection of Bill Wangensteen to Norway House. On view for the first time, we invite you to read these objects the way their makers intended—not simply as folk artifacts, but as a visual language, carved with intention, and carried forward through hand, heart, and heritage.
Opening Reception: 5:00PM–8:00PM
Program: 6:00PM
Velkomst (Welcome) drink provided with ticket purchase. NA available.
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Norway House Members: $5.00
General Admission: $10.00
