Friday, October 27, 2023

06 Works, October 27h. is Sigrid Hjertén's day, her story, illustrated with footnotes #259

Sigrid Hjertén
The blue boat, c. 1934
Oil on canvas,
Private collection

Estimated for kr600,000 SEK - kr800,000 SEK in April 2012

Sigrid Hjertén
By the sea
Watercolor on paper
21 x 28.5 cm. 
Private collection

Estimate for 1,755 USD in Oct 2021

Sigrid Hjertén
Seated woman
Watercolor on paper
33 x 23.5 cm. 
Private collection

Sold for 75 000 SEK in May 2022

Sigrid Hjertén
Music group on summer meadow , c. 1927
Oil on canvas
92 x 73 cm
Private collection

Estimated for kr600,000 SEK - kr800,000 SEK in April 2012

Born to a middle-class family in Sundsvall, Sigrid Hjertén lost her mother at a very young age. She studied to be a drawing teacher at the Konstfack University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, and in 1908 became a tapestry card designer for Giöbels, a decorative arts company. Encouraged by the young painter Isaac Grünewald, she joined the Matisse Academy in Paris, where she was able to enjoy the freedom that her situation as a young foreign artist gave her. Upon returning to Sweden in 1911, she married Grünewald. In 1912, her exhibition with the group De Atta (“the eight”) marked her official entry into the art world. She moved into a studio in Stockholm in 1913 with her husband, where caring for her young son restricted her to painting still lifes, figures, and outdoor views she saw from the window. Nevertheless, she tried her hand at a free form, between allegory and reality. Despite her involvement in numerous exhibitions throughout Europe between 1910 and 1920, most often with expressionist painters, she was lambasted by the critics who failed to understand her work on colour and stylised forms.

Sigrid Hjertén
Den gröna toquen
Oil on canvas
46 x 55.5 cm
Private collection

Sold for 180 000 SEK in May 2022

Sigrid Hjertén
Female act
Oil on canvas
55 x 45,5 cm
Private collection

Sold for 150 000 SEK in May 2022

In the 1920s the couple returned to Paris. As Hjertén’s paintings began to change and became more and more emotionally charged; some of them expressed the inner conflict she felt at being at once a wife, a mother, and an artist. Indeed, her husband’s career and raising her child left her with very little energy and time for her own work. Furthermore, Grünewald’s absence, due to organising his own exhibitions, left her very isolated. In 1932, the weakened painter returned to Sweden, where she made several stays at a psychiatric hospital. However, her pictorial production increased, as she reworked patterns from her previous paintings. She exhibited several times in the 1930s, and the Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm eventually held a retrospective exhibition of her work in 1936. The couple divorced in 1937, and Hjertén stopped painting a year later. After spending eleven years in a mental institution, she died from the consequences of a lobotomy. Hjertén is now considered one of the most innovative Swedish artists of the early 20th century. More on Sigrid Hjertén




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03 Works, August 12th. is Abbott Handerson Thayer's day, his story, illustrated with footnotes

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