Misplaced Pages

Agnes Slott-Møller

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Danish Symbolist painter
Agnes Slott-Møller
Agnes Slott-Møller, 1900 by Frederik Riise
BornAgnes Rambusch
(1862-06-10)10 June 1862
Copenhagen, Denmark
Died11 June 1937(1937-06-11) (aged 75)
Assens Municipality, Denmark
NationalityDanish
Known forPainting
MovementSymbolism
Spouse Harald Slott-Møller ​(m. 1888)

Agnes Slott-Møller, née Rambusch (10 June 1862 in Nyboder – 11 June 1937 in Løgismose, Assens Municipality), was a Danish Symbolist painter; influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites. She is known for works inspired by Danish history and folklore. Her husband was the painter Harald Slott-Møller.

Biography

Her father, Jacob Heinrich Victor Rambusch (1825–1886), was a navy officer who was eventually promoted to Commander. As a child, she was fascinated by the Illustreret Danmarkshistorie for Folket [da] by Adam Fabricius [da], with drawings by Lorenz Frølich. In 1878, she began taking lessons at the "Industrial Art School for Women [da]". She graduated in 1885 and took additional lessons from P.S. Krøyer, followed by more with Harald Slott-Møller, whom she married in 1888 and embarked with on a tour of Italy.

In 1891, she and her husband helped their friend, Johan Rohde, establish the artists' association known as "Den Frie Udstilling". She had her first daughter in 1893. A second daughter, born in 1901, died in infancy. In 1894, she won a competition to provide decorative works at the Copenhagen City hall. Despite her fervent Danish nationalism, this would be her only official commission.

In 1904, following some disagreements at Den Frie Udstilling, she resumed her showings at the Charlottenborg Spring Exhibition. Two years later, she was awarded the Eckersberg Medal. In 1907, a feud with the Funen Painters, known as the "Bondemalerstriden [da]" (Peasant painter conflict) led to her and Harald's increasing isolation from the contemporary art scene.

She also wrote articles and gave lectures on Danish medieval history and nationalistic subjects. In 1917, she published Nationale Værdier (National Values) and, in 1923, Folkevise Billeder (Folk Images). In 1932, she was awarded the Ingenio et arti medal.

Selected paintings

  • The Dying Betrothed, 1906 The Dying Betrothed, 1906
  • Niels Ebbesen Niels Ebbesen
  • Ebbe Skammelsøn in the Wedding Yard (from a folk song) Ebbe Skammelsøn in the Wedding Yard (from a folk song)

References

  1. ^ Brief biography @ KVInfo.
  2. ^ Brief biography @ Kunstindeks Danmark.

Further reading

  • Iben Overgaard: Agnes Slott-Møller : Skønhed er til evig glæde, Skovgaard Museum, 2008 ISBN 978-87-87191-17-3
  • Lise Svanholm (ed.): Agnes og Marie : breve mellem Agnes Slott-Møller og Marie Krøyer 1885-1937, Gyldendal, 1991 ISBN 87-01-18530-6
  • Bodil Busk Laursen (ed.): Agnes og Harald Slott-Møller – mellem kunst og idealer, Kunstforeningen, 1988 ISBN 87-7441-033-4

External links

Categories: