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Lund House (Interior Museum)
Lunds Hus is a distinctive Swiss-style villa built in 1891 that now serves as Ekebergparken's indoor museum, visitor centre and administrative hub. The museum's exhibitions offer a thorough account of Ekeberg's history and natural environment, tracing the area from the Stone Age through to the present day. It's an essential visit to understand the broader context of the park before exploring its grounds.

Pabellón Ekeberg (Dan Graham)
Ekeberg Pavilion is a site-specific installation by Dan Graham (1942–2022), constructed in glass, stone and metal in 2013. Measuring 260 x 55 x 715 cm, this work invites visitors to step inside a space that functions simultaneously as architecture and artistic event. The reflective and transparent glass dissolves the boundaries between artwork, landscape and observer, creating an experience unique to its Oslo setting.

Skyspace: The Color Beneath (James Turrell)
Skyspace: The Color Beneath is a light installation by American artist James Turrell, situated within the forested grounds of Ekebergparken in Oslo. Part of the park's permanent collection, it complements another Turrell work on display here, Ganzfeld: Double Vision. Visitors can experience how the artist manipulates natural and artificial light to create an immersive, ever-changing visual experience. What to see includes the interplay of colour and atmosphere as daylight shifts throughout the day.

Ganzfeld: Visión Doble (James Turrell)
Ganzfeld: Visión Doble is a light and colour installation by American artist James Turrell, opened in 2013 within Ekebergparken sculpture park. It forms one of two works by Turrell at the site, alongside Skyspace: The Color Beneath. Both pieces explore the artist's characteristic investigation of light, colour and perception, inviting visitors to experience how light shapes our understanding of space and form.

Pathfinder #18700 (Fujiko Nakaya)
Pathfinder #18700 is a fog sculpture by Japanese artist Fujiko Nakaya, born in Sapporo in 1933. Permanently installed at Ekebergparken since 25 April 2018, the work uses high-pressure technology to disperse water microdroplets throughout the forest. The fog shifts and transforms with changing weather conditions, immersing visitors physically in the artwork. You'll feel the mist on your skin and clothes, becoming part of the material itself as you walk through.
- 1.Lund House (Interior Museum)
- 2.Pabellón Ekeberg (Dan Graham)
- 3.Skyspace: The Color Beneath (James Turrell)
- 4.Ganzfeld: Visión Doble (James Turrell)
- 5.Pathfinder #18700 (Fujiko Nakaya)
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