


All Together and NOW
Skeppets Preschool, Adolfsberg — Commissioned by Örebro Konsthall
Permanent site-specific installation
Digitally printed wallpaper, laser-cut acrylic, epoxy, and wood
Size: 18 × 3m
Skeppets Preschool is home to children from many different nationalities. Our commission was
to create a work that could reflect this diversity — and give space to the children’s own thoughts, dreams, and sense of identity.
We began by meeting the children and listening. Their ideas ranged widely: about the world, about people and animals, about how we live together and take care of each other. The conversations touched on big questions — about difference, friendship, and our shared planet.
Together with the educators, we decided to transform the dining hall — the central space used daily for meals, gatherings, and shared moments — into a room for imagination, learning, and community.
The result is a large world tree, stretching across 18 metres of wall, where animals from different continents and habitats come together in one place. The tree works as a storytelling tapestry
— each animal is an opening for conversations about origin, culture, identity and belonging.
The artwork is part of the children’s daily life. A visual presence that invites them to feel seen,
to be curious and to talk about equality, diversity, and the world, society they are growing into together.
All Together and NOW
Skeppets Preschool, Adolfsberg — Commissioned by Örebro Konsthall. Permanent site-specific installation
Digitally printed wallpaper, laser-cut acrylic, epoxy, and wood
Size: 18 × 3m
Skeppets Preschool is home to children from many different nationalities. Our commission was to create a work that could reflect this diversity — and give space to the children’s own thoughts, dreams, and sense of identity.
We began by meeting the children and listening. Their ideas ranged widely: about the world, about people and animals, about how we live together and take care of each other. The conversations touched on big questions — about difference, friendship, and our shared planet.
Together with the educators, we decided to transform the dining hall, the central space used daily for meals, gatherings, and shared moments — into a room for imagination, learning, and community.
The result is a large world tree, stretching across 18 metres of wall, where animals from different continents and habitats come together in one place. The tree works as a storytelling tapestry — each animal is an opening for conversations about origin, culture, identity and belonging.
The artwork is part of the children’s daily life. A visual presence that invites them to feel seen, to be curious and to talk about equality, diversity, and the world, society they are growing into together.
















