Showing posts with label sweden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sweden. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2012

Swedish Landscape in Fine Art and Tapestry

Illustration: Helmer Jonas Osslund. Varafton Bakom Kiruna.

Swedish tapestry design of the early twentieth century was known at the time as probably some of the best woven artwork being produced in Europe. Much of the narrative and compositional work was based on the landscape and tended to follow what was termed as typical of the Swedish natural environment. Many of the tapestry pieces produced by a range of fine and decorative artists contained the colours, tones and textures that were so much a part of the Swedish identity across so many disciplines, but particularly in textiles. 

Fine art and tapestry during this period enjoyed a particularly close relationship. Swedish artists showed a creative interpretation, but also an innate understanding of colour, tone and texture. The relationship between artist and colour seemed so apparent to many outsiders that it was often seen as an integral part of the Swedish fine art and tapestry scene, so much so that it was often stated that Swedish artists placed '...great weight...on colours and their values.'

It seems fitting therefore to place two illustrations, one fine art and one tapestry, beside each other in the same article. They were not produced by the same artist; the painting is by Helmer Jonas Osslund and the tapestry by Henrik Krogh. However, it perhaps needs to be seen how close fine and tapestry art were considered to be during this period. Tapestry in particular was entering a rich new creative phase of its life in Sweden. Woven textiles had a long and traditional history in Sweden, but it was not until the latter part of the nineteenth century that weaving within the remit of tapestry, really began to be opened up as a contemporary art form. 

Illustration: Henrik Krogh. The Spruce Coppice, c1913.

Both fine art and tapestry became linked with the search for idyllic ruralism and even a search for the untouched wilderness as portrayed by scenes of Sweden's northern provinces. In some respects, both fine and tapestry art were influenced by the Swedish Arts and Crafts movement, which in its turn was initially influenced by the English Arts and Crafts movement. With the late but rapid industrialization of Sweden and the urbanisation of at least part of its population, the search for an idyllic rural life in the 1890s was just as important and illusive as the same search had been in England. However, although rural idylls and utopias always seemed to struggle with the realities and practicalities of industrial Europe, the ideal did fuel the creative arts. So much so that in many respects the Arts and Crafts movement which took place in many European states and regions, and for a variety of differing reasons, produced some of the best in hand produced decorative arts work.

To see fine art and tapestry in tandem with each other, sharing the same inspirational origins and with similar results, allows us to see how closely the two mediums could work together when inspired to do so. Osslund's painting Varafton Bakom Kiruna could well have been commissioned as a tapestry work, and Krogh's The Spruce Coppice could equally have been commissioned as an original fine art piece. Both are beautifully proportioned and use colour and tone to its most dramatic effect. Texture is inbuilt and implied, taking on a creative naturalism that is easily identified with the landscape. Although one composition appears enclosed and insular and the other open and expansive, the colour themes which range from the rich and deep earth tones to the series of greens and yellows that denote foliage, are in some ways so similar that they could be said to be part of the same sense of creative and observational characteristics and they certainly share a part of the Swedish environmental identity.

By showing these two pieces of work it is hoped that it gives some indication of the artistic creativity that came to fruition during the early part of the twentieth century in Sweden. That Sweden had a strong native tradition of creativity, one that is often considered to be perhaps one of the oldest unbroken craft systems in Europe, did not stop native Swedes from allowing a sense of contemporary and expansive creative freedom being added to the traditions of the past. It is this continuation of tradition through the contemporary that has made Swedish art, design and decoration so successful and such an essential part of the decorative and creative arts of our own time. It is perhaps an understanding that tradition does not necessarily entail intransigence and retreat, which should in its turn be seen as perhaps a lifesaving attitude to take when considering those same traditions in other parts of Europe that have and are struggling to survive as part of the contemporary world.

Further reading links:

Monday, September 27, 2010

Maja Sjostrom Tapestry

Illustration: Maja Sjostrom. Tapestry design, c1905.

This excellent example of early twentieth century Swedish tapestry design was produced by Maja Sjostrom in about 1905. Sjostrom produced various forms of woven textile and tapestry work over more than a twenty year period in Sweden itself, before moving to Italy in 1924. Along with work of a more personal nature she was also involved in publicly commissioned pieces that included textile work produced for the Council Hall within the Stockholm City Hall building which was started in 1911 but not completed until 1923.

Sjostrom was involved with, and was a firm supporter of the Handarbetets Vanner movement in Sweden, which was a form of textile hand craft support founded in 1874 very much with similar ideals to the various European Arts & Crafts movements. It is still very much in existence today supporting textile hand crafted work, along with their makers through a series of various support methods including an educational training course.
The tapestry shown here is typical of Swedish work produced during the period which runs from the very beginning of the twentieth century up to and including the First World War in which Sweden remained neutral. Superficially the work does have certain similarities to aspects of the international Art Nouveau movement, a shallow stylised graphic dimension and an emphasis on ambience and manner, rather than observational detail. These similarities at least draws attention to aspects of the huge output of illustrative and graphic work produced across Europe during this period. 

However, this piece, along with a high proportion of tapestry work produced during this period across the entire Scandinavian region from Finland to Norway, has definite and some would say even a defined nature to the stylised compositional landscapes, many set within woods, glades and lakes. It would appear that this defined style separates Swedish tapestry work in particular but Scandinavian in general, from the rest of Europe, making Sjostrom's work part of a unique understanding and interpretation of her immediate natural environment that was obviously such an important part of the Scandinavian makeup.

The natural world is reflected in a different form from that say of the English Arts & Crafts movement, which relied very much on an intimate observation of nature. William Morris produced prodigious amounts of textile work showing the tranquil details of English flora and fauna, and even tapestry work tended towards an intimacy with nature. Sjostrom's tapestry piece on the other hand, very much gives the impression of the mystery of the natural world. A world fuelled by spirits and myths that was a rich compositional and narrative theme across the entire Scandinavian region and was the subject of many tapestry pieces before, during and after this period.

These landscape compositions are also imbued with traditional Swedish interpretations of both nature and woven textiles themselves. In some respect artists and designers such as Sjostrom, were continuing the traditions of weave and craft that were seen very much at the time, as they are today, as part of a continuing cultural heritage that not only had to be preserved, but kept alive by integrating textile crafts within the contemporary world. To be able to reflect the ambience of that contemporary world without losing the identity that the traditional methods produced is a very fine balance and very difficult to achieve. That Sweden, with artists and designers like Maja Sjostrom, were able to achieve this balance, producing work that was relatively harmonious, appearing as if a natural progression of Swedish tradition, which in fact it was, is a testament to the many talented textile artists produced by Sweden during this period.

Further reading links:
Handarbetets vanner och konstnarerna (Liljevalchs katalog) (Swedish Edition)
Swedish Textile Art
33 Contemporary Swedish Weaving Patterns for Monk's Cloth
The Big Book of Weaving: Handweaving in the Swedish Tradition: Techniques, Patterns, Designs and Materials
Swedish Weaving/Huck Embroidery Designs Book 2
SWEDISH TEXTILE ART: Traditional Marriage Weavings from Scania (The Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Swedish Textile Art)
Swedish Weaving,
The Treasure Chest of Swedish Weaving
Swedish Hand Weaving
Weave Structures The Swedish Way - Volume 1
Dress Your Loom The Swedish Way an In-depth Study of Time Honored Techniques
Glimakra Emilia Rigid Heddle 13" Swedish Table Weaving Loom

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Anders Zorn Tapestries

Illustration: Anders Zorn. Dalecarlian Scene tapestry panel, 1909.

Anders Zorn the Swedish fine art painter is probably better known outside of his native Sweden, as that of an accomplished and highly successful nineteenth and early twentieth century portrait painter. Zorn travelled widely in both Europe and North America and his portraits made him wealthy and acclaimed. However, as if a tonic for the often unrewarding profession of portrait painter, Zorn had a keen interest in the traditions of his native Sweden. The representation of both a rural and traditional basis of life in Sweden became more important to him as his life and career progressed, so that nearer the end of his life the subject of the traditions of Swedish life and culture became much more acute.

Zorn produced a number of compositions with subject matter that were based on the ordinary traditions of rural life in Sweden. These came in a number of disciplines, most admittedly within fine art painting, but some within the traditionally strong Swedish discipline of textiles. This was not particularly unusual for the period as many fine artists were keen to be seen as pan-discipline workers, producing efforts not only in textiles, but also that of ceramics, metal, glass and wood. That much of this work was art rather than design based did often limit the results, but it is still interesting to note the results of the process of a fine art sensibility being transposed into craft or design.

The examples shown here are relatively straightforward transpositions from a fine art origin to that of woven tapestry. Although there is no overly unique interpretation from Zorn, it is interesting to note how he has interpreted his compositions towards a textile based medium. The work has all the appearance of a graphic based dimension, with figures and backgrounds appearing both fresh and spontaneous, giving the impression of an element of contemporary vitality and spontaneity to the traditional rural scenes. Admittedly, this is not always the impression that has been immediately connected to either rural or traditional lifestyles, particularly by those of a more urban disposition.

Illustration: Anders Zorn. Dalecarlian Scene tapestry panel, 1909.

All three tapestries are connected and should by rights be seen as a triptych of panels showing various aspects of the one theme. That theme was to illustrate the life lived in the Dalecarlian region of Sweden. Dalecarlia or Dalarna, is an area of the country that had become associated since at least the mid-nineteenth century as being in some respects, the heartland of both Sweden and its culture. The native Arts & Crafts movement was particularly interested in using Dalecarlia as a metaphor for all that was considered vital in preserving and prolonging the traditions of Swedish life.

Perceived heartlands were a particular necessity for a number of Arts & Crafts movements, more so in Europe than elsewhere. Specific regions and areas were often interpreted as literal vaults containing the uncontaminated traditions and root culture of a nation. Although much of this was clearly romantically misplaced sentiment, it does not change the fact that areas like Dalecarlia became the subject of intense retrospection and rich subject matter for a wide-ranging list of creative individuals that included fine artists, designers, craftspeople, photographers, critics, musicians and writers.

These particular pieces by Zorn were even displayed at the 1909 Exhibition of Swedish Applied Art that took place in the capital, Stockholm. Zorn was not the only fine artist represented at the Exhibition, a number of popular and well-placed names in both Swedish fine art and design were represented such as Alfred Wallander, Carl Larsson and Gunnar Wennerberg. Zorn's tapestry work can be seen as a fine example of both the traditions of Swedish craft and culture, along with the sensibilities of a contemporary artist to those traditions.

Illustration: Anders Zorn. Dalecarlian Scene tapestry panel, 1909.

Anyone interested in good selection of the fine art work produced by Zorn during his career might wish to follow the link to the Anders Zorn website, which can be found below in the Further reading links section, along with some relevant books on Zorn that can be found on Amazon.com.

Further reading links:
Anders Zorn website
Anders Zorn
Anders Zorn Rediscovered
ANDERS ZORN, His Life and Work
Nationalism and the Nordic Imagination: Swedish Art of the 1890s
Greeting Cards: Anders Zorn Paintings
Anders Zorn In the Woods 19 1/2 x 15 1/2 Print
Anders Zorn 1860-1920: An Introduction to His Life and Achievements
The Prints of Anders Zorn
Anders Zorn
The Etchings of Anders Zorn: From the Collection of the Springfield Art Museum
Dagmar, 1911 Giclee Poster Print by Anders Leonard Zorn, 24x32