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'''Gustav Waldemar Sjölander Johnson'''<ref></ref> (b. January 6, 1908 – d. March 18, 1988) was a ] painter, ] and ]. '''Gustav Waldemar Sjölander Johnson'''<ref></ref> (b. January 6, 1908 – d. March 18, 1988) was a ] painter, printmaker and sculptor, who developed most of his career in ]. He immigrated to the country just after ], after establishing himself as an artist in in his native ]. His career included individual exhibitions in venues such as the ] in Mexico and the Konstakademie in Sweden, with his works held by museums in Mexico and Europe.
==Life==
Sjölander was born on January 6, 1908 in ], Sweden, the son of an engineer and inventor of locks for safes.<ref name=Claudio> {{cite web |title= Waldemar Sjolander |publisher= Artes e Historia magazine |location=Mexico City |language=Spanish |url= http://www.arts-history.mx/sitios/index.php?id_sitio=1323154&id_seccion=354334&id_subseccion=590858&id_documento=1993|accessdate=October 23, 2013}}</ref><ref name=mfavela> {{cite web |author= María Teresa Favela |title= Waldemar Sjolander El Gran Colorista |work= Addenda |publisher= CENIDIAP |location=Mexico |language=Spanish |issue=4 |month=January |year=2003 |url= http://www.cenidiap.net/biblioteca/addendas/1E-4-Waldemar.pdf |accessdate=October 23, 2013}}</ref> As a child, he studied at the Free School of Fine Arts with Albert Edh and at the ] with Tor Bjurstrom. He also traveled with his father on business, which allowed him to study in other parts of Europe such as ], ] and France. In the 1920s, as a teenager, he was traveling as a sailor, traditional for young men of the country. During this decade he visited ] and other ] ports of Mexico various times.<ref name=mfavela/><ref name=bancomer> {{cite book |author=Guillermo Tovar de Teresa |title= Repertory of Artists in Mexico: Plastic and Decorative Arts |volume=III |year=1996 |publisher= Grupo Financiero Bancomer |location=Mexico City |isbn=968 6258 56 6 |page=294}}</ref>


His visits to Mexico impressed him and by the end of the 1930s he decided to immigrate to the country, but World War II delayed his plans. During this war, he became an officer in a cavalry regiment along Sweden’s border with ], studying Spanish from an old grammar book in his free time.<ref name=bancomer/><ref name=mfavela/>
== Biography ==
Waldemar Sjölander made his studies of painting in his home country, later he expanded and specialized in sculpture in Norway and Denmark. In 1930 he exhibited his works, which were influenced by ] and ] and ], for the first time. From the 1920s he traveled several times to America. After ], Sjölander moved to ] and in 1947 to ], where he exhibited in the ] in ] for his first time. This was the time when he decided to reside in Mexico, and for this purpose he was naturalized Mexican. He toured almost all of Mexico, concentrating on the landscape and the people.


Sjölander became one of many fine artists that immigrated to Mexico in the 20th century. After he left his country at the end of the war, he first went to ], where he stayed for a year.<ref name=Claudio/> In 1947, he arrived again to Veracruz. He was attracted to Mexico as a kind of “tropical paradise” relatively unaffected by the vices of civilization and also free from the long winters of Sweden.<ref name=mfavela/><ref name=bancomer/> Eager to explore his new home, the traveled the country, to Mexico City, ], ], ] and ] for two years, creating more than 200 paintings and many more drawings. He was particularly impressed with the landscapes in ], but eventually settled in Mexico City.<ref name=bancomer/><ref name=mfavela/>


Sjölander died in Mexico City on March 18, 1988 at the age of 80.<ref name=mfavela/>
During the World War II, was recruited as a trooper by six years in the service of Sweden. At the end of this event and round by ship to México, in Oaxaca there was installed for five years, in one of his visits to México City, he met whom he married Aurora, with whom he lived until his last days and had two sons, Gustavo and Carlos.
==Career==
Sjölander began his artistic career in Sweden. He began creating prints, especially ] in the mid 1940s, and to survive often had to paint cafes and other commercial establishments.<ref name=Claudio/><ref name=mfavela/> In 1944, he had an individual exhibition at the Olsen Art Gallery, then at the Modern Art Gallery in 1945 and 1946. These exhibitions made him an established artist in his home country.<ref name=mfavela/>


After arriving in Mexico, ] and ] helped the artist get his first individual exhibition in Mexico with the then Museo Nacional de Artes Plásticas of the ] in 1948, followed by another in 1950, where his work received favorable reviews.<ref name=mfavela/><ref name=bancomer/> Other important individual exhibitions include another at the same museum in 1960, the Palacio de Bellas Artes in 1965 and 1969, the ] in 1957, 1958 and 1967, the Mer-Kup Gallery in Mexico City in 1966 and 1968 and the Konstakademie in Sweden in 1961. He also participated in numerous collective exhibitions in Mexico and countries such as Japan, France, ] and Cuba.<ref name=mfavela/><ref name=bancomer/> Many of these were biennale events such as the Salón Annual de Pintura y Grabado in Mexico City in 1958, the International Biennale of Painting, Sculpture and Engraving in 1960, various biennales of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes for sculpture in the 1960s, the International Printing Biennale in ] in 1960 and 1972 and the ] in 1961 and 1972. In 1982 he was elected to the selection committee for the Triennial of Sculpture.<ref name=Claudio/><ref name=mfavela/>
the absence of not dominate the host language, its integration into the Mexican culture was difficult. His position was not in no time trader of his work, he detested this attitude. He only awaited the opportunity to participate in artistic events, he was accepted and successful, working in his work and his classes every day of his life, never waste his time.


Sjölander’s works can be found in the collection of the ], the ], the ] in Paris, the ], the ], the Palacio de Bellas Artes, the National Museum of Rhodesia and the ] in Cuba.<ref name=Claudio/><ref name=mfavela/>
Sjölander taught at ], at the ] (INBA), at the ], at the ] of the ] (UNAM), and at the Research and Experimentation Center of Plastic Arts of the INBA.<ref name="MCJV"> {{es icon}}, Museo Claudio Jiménez Vizcarra.</ref> Some of his works belong to museums all over the world. As noted above, the theme of his work are people and landscapes. His artistic movement, which initially was figurative, later became semi-abstract. He specialized in direct carving and used the materials plaster, bronze and wood.


In addition to producing art for which he never accepted the help of a patron, Sjölander also taught at the ] (1971-1985) and at the ] (1977-1985). In 1985 he joined the Centro de Investigación y Experimentación Plástica.<ref name=bancomer/><ref name=mfavela/>
Had a preference for classical music, one of its authors, Antonin Dvorak "New World Symphony." In literature he read works of Samuel Beckett.


Sjölander’s work was recognized with various distinctions during his lifetime, including Knight’s Decoration First Class from his home country of Sweden in 1959, membership in the ] in France in the 1960s along with membership in the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana. He received the Xipe-Totec award at the First National Sculpture Biennale in 1962 and the first sculpture prize from the Salon de la Plástica Mexicana in 1971. Retrospectives of his work include one at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in 1985, one from the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in 1991 and at the ] in 1998.<ref name=bancomer/><ref name=mfavela/>
At the end of a creative life and intensive labor, Aurora attended Waldemar Sjölander full time in his last years, Sjölander suffered by cebrebral sclerosis, hydroencephalitis and by injured intervertebral discs. He was surrounded by his family and friends. His last understandable words were: "hjälpa mig" (Swedish for ''help me''). He died in Mexico City on March 18, 1988.
==Artistry==
Sjölander painted, sculpted and did printmaking during his career, designing over 500 of the tools he used.<ref name=mfavela/> In painting he worked in oils and in printing he worked in ], ], lithography and ] .<ref name=Claudio/> He sculpted three dimensional works along with reliefs (his specialty) in plaster, bronze and wood, with wood his most expressive medium. He often obtained his materials on his travels in Mexico, such as ] from Veracruz.<ref name=bancomer/><ref name=mfavela/>


The artist’s work, especially his painting, is noted for its use of color. In Sweden his was a member of a group called the “Colorists of Gothenburg” as an art movement in that country, which experimented with colors not before used there. When he arrived to Mexico, nature and the colors common in Mexico were very different from his home country and changes to his art began almost immediately, although in both places nature played a dominant role.<ref name=mfavela/><ref name=Claudio/> His earlier work used bolder colors than later work, which became more subtle and delicate.<ref name=mfavela/> ] wrote that “His autonomy lies in his color, in the rich hues that never shatter the surface of the painting; the balance and originality of his sculptures reveal a unique resolution of form and style.<ref name=bancomer/>
== Work ==
{{quote|Autonomy in its color, its rich chromatics that never breaks the surface of the frame and balance and originality of his sculptures will show a unique shape and style.|Fernando Gamboa, director of the Fomento Cultural ]}}.

"Waldemar Sjölander joined our fight and has since been regarded as one among us."
-Remember the painter and sculptor Mexican Manuel Felguérez-
Referring to the artists that he integrated the movement called, "Rupture Generation" .

Waldemar Sjölander made a combined work between: Oils on linen , engravings, lithographs , gouaches, drawings , bronze sculptures and reliefs , sculptures and reliefs wood , painting on ceramics .


<gallery></gallery>

== Exhibitions ==
=== Individual exhibitions ===
* 1947: ], Mexico City
* 1950: Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City
* 1952:
** ], Stockholm, Sweden
** ], ], Sweden.
* 1957: ], Mexico City
* 1958
** ], Mexico City
** ], Mexico City
* 1960: ], Mexico City
* 1961: ], Stockholm, Sweden
* 1965:
** Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City
** House of Peace (at "Agency for International Promotion of Culture), Mexico City
* 1966: Galería Mer-Kup, Mexico City
* 1967: Salón de la Plástica Mexicana, Mexico City
* 1968: Galería Mer-Kup, Mexico City
* 1969: Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City
* 1972: Galería Mer-Kup, Mexico City
* 1975: ], Mexico City
* 1976: Lorensberg Konstsalong, Gothenburg, Sweden
* 1978: Galería Estela Shapiro, Mexico City
* 1980:
** Galería Gabriela Orozco, Mexico City
** Contemporary Art Forum, Mexico City
** Galería Hagerman, Mexico City
* 1984: Picture Gallery, Gothenburg, Sweden
* 1986: "Tribute exhibition" at Galería Metropolitana, ], Mexico City

; Postmortem individual exhibitions
* 1998: Museum Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City
* 1992: Andres Siegel Gallery, Mexico City

=== Collective exhibitions ===
* 1958: Salon de la Plastica Mexicana, Mexico City
* 1960: International ] of Sculpture, ], Japan
* 1961: VI ], Brazil
* 1962: I Biennial of Sculpture, INBA in Mexico City
* 1967: III National Sculpture Biennial, Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City
* 1971: I Annual Exhibition of Sculpture, Plastic Arts Salon México, Mexico City
* 1972:
** "20 Contemporary Mexican Artists", Center of Modern Art Temporary School Courses, ], Mexico
** International Biennale of Sculpture, Tokyo, Japan
* 1974: "Mexican Painting and Sculpture", Tokyo, Japan
* 1976:
** "Art Object", Tane Jewelry, Mexico City
** ], ], France
* 1977: "Art Object"], ], Russia
* ], ], Russia
* 1981: "International Competition for Small Sculptures", ], ]
* 1984:
** I ], ], Cuba
** "At the time of the 80", Lake House, UNAM, Mexico City

;Postmortem collective exhibitions
* 1989: "25 Years of the Museo de Arte Moderno", Mexico City
* 1991: "The Sculpture and UNAM, University Museum Poplar, UNAM, Mexico City
* 1993: "The Mexican Sculpture at the End of the Millennium" at the ] festival

== Acquisitions ==
* ], Stockholm, Sweden.
* ], Stockholm, Sweden.
* ], Gothenburg, Sweden.
* INBA, Mexico City
* National Museum, ], South Africa
* Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City
* ], Havana, Cuba
* ], Paris, France

== Bibliography ==
* ''Waldemar Sjölander'', A.R.S. Förlag, Stockholm, 1946.
* Hjern, Kjell: ''i Konsten Gothenburg'', Wesäta Förlaj, Gothenburg, 1961.
* Moon Arroyo, Antonio: ''Mexican Contemporary Sculpture'', INBA, Mexico, 1964.
* Monteforte Toledo, Mario: ''The Living Stones'', 2a.ed., UNAM, Mexico, 1969.
* Peterson, Bob: ''Waldemar Sjölander'', Atlantis, Stockholm, 1980.
* Raben and Sjogren: ''Göteborgs Koloristerna'', Halmstad, Sweden, 1948.
* Ragnar, and Jungmarker Gunnar Hoppe: ''Svartosch Vitt'', Stockholm, 1946.
* Sallberg, Harold: ''Svensk Grafik'', Gunnar Jungmarker, Stockholm, 1957.
* Fernando Gamboa: ''Waldemar Sjölander. Artista Sueco - Mexicano. Exposición Retrospectiva. Pinturas, Esculturas y Otras Técnicas'' (catalogue), Museo de Arte Moderno, INBA, ], Mexico, 1975.
* ''Historia del Arte Mexicano '', SEP, INBA, Salvat, Mexico, 1985, t. 11 and 12.
* ''Waldemar Sjölander, Pinturas, Relieves, Esculturas'' (catalogue), Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes , INBA, SEP, México, 1985.
* Kassner, Lily: ''Dictionary of Mexican sculptors of the twentieth century'', volume II, ], General Directorate of Publications, first edition: 1997. ISBN 968-29-9777-1 General Works, ISBN
* Gamboa, Fernando: ''Waldemar Sjölander. Artista Sueco - Mexicano. Exposición Retrospectiva. Pinturas, Esculturas y Otras Técnicas'' (catalogue), Museo de Arte Moderno, INBA, SEP, México, 1975.
* Antonio Luna Arroyo:"Panorama de la Escultura Mexicana Contemporanea", Ediciones INBA, México, D. F., p. 117, 118, 1964.
*"Siglo XXI, Grandes Maestros Mexicanos", Tomo II, MARCO - Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Monterrey, A. C., 1a Edición, Diciembre, p. 161,ISBN; 968 - 6623 - 566, 2003.

== Awards ==
* 1962: "Xipe-Totec Prize" at the I National Sculpture Biennale, INBA, Mexico City
* 1967: "Honorable Dimension" at the III National Sculpture Biennale, Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City
* 1971: First prize, Salon de la Plastica Mexicana, Mexico City


A large number of his paintings, reliefs and engraving relate to man and landscape, with only a few portraits such as one of his wife, Aurora, in 1952. His early work was more figurative, showing influence from ] (who he met in ]), ]], ] and ] and northern European ], due to his formal training. Although he was of the age of the ], in Mexico he became part of the following ]. His work gradually became less figurative. By the end of the 1950s and early 1960s, the human figure began to divide and by the 1970s and early 1980s he work was more of an abstract analysis of form with ]s.<ref name=bancomer/><ref name=mfavela/>
== External links == == External links ==
{{Commonscat}} {{Commonscat}}

Revision as of 18:28, 23 October 2013

Waldemar Sjölander
Born(1908-01-06)January 6, 1908
Gothenburg, Sweden
DiedMarch 18, 1988(1988-03-18) (aged 80)
Mexico City, Mexico
NationalityMexican
Known forpainting, printmaking, sculpture

Gustav Waldemar Sjölander Johnson (b. January 6, 1908 – d. March 18, 1988) was a Swedish painter, printmaker and sculptor, who developed most of his career in Mexico. He immigrated to the country just after World War II, after establishing himself as an artist in in his native Sweden. His career included individual exhibitions in venues such as the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico and the Konstakademie in Sweden, with his works held by museums in Mexico and Europe.

Life

Sjölander was born on January 6, 1908 in Gothenburg, Sweden, the son of an engineer and inventor of locks for safes. As a child, he studied at the Free School of Fine Arts with Albert Edh and at the Valand Art School with Tor Bjurstrom. He also traveled with his father on business, which allowed him to study in other parts of Europe such as Denmark, Norway and France. In the 1920s, as a teenager, he was traveling as a sailor, traditional for young men of the country. During this decade he visited Veracruz and other Gulf ports of Mexico various times.

His visits to Mexico impressed him and by the end of the 1930s he decided to immigrate to the country, but World War II delayed his plans. During this war, he became an officer in a cavalry regiment along Sweden’s border with Finland, studying Spanish from an old grammar book in his free time.

Sjölander became one of many fine artists that immigrated to Mexico in the 20th century. After he left his country at the end of the war, he first went to Cuba, where he stayed for a year. In 1947, he arrived again to Veracruz. He was attracted to Mexico as a kind of “tropical paradise” relatively unaffected by the vices of civilization and also free from the long winters of Sweden. Eager to explore his new home, the traveled the country, to Mexico City, Guadalajara, Tehuantepec, Juchitán and San Blas for two years, creating more than 200 paintings and many more drawings. He was particularly impressed with the landscapes in Oaxaca, but eventually settled in Mexico City.

Sjölander died in Mexico City on March 18, 1988 at the age of 80.

Career

Sjölander began his artistic career in Sweden. He began creating prints, especially lithography in the mid 1940s, and to survive often had to paint cafes and other commercial establishments. In 1944, he had an individual exhibition at the Olsen Art Gallery, then at the Modern Art Gallery in 1945 and 1946. These exhibitions made him an established artist in his home country.

After arriving in Mexico, Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco helped the artist get his first individual exhibition in Mexico with the then Museo Nacional de Artes Plásticas of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in 1948, followed by another in 1950, where his work received favorable reviews. Other important individual exhibitions include another at the same museum in 1960, the Palacio de Bellas Artes in 1965 and 1969, the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana in 1957, 1958 and 1967, the Mer-Kup Gallery in Mexico City in 1966 and 1968 and the Konstakademie in Sweden in 1961. He also participated in numerous collective exhibitions in Mexico and countries such as Japan, France, Hungary and Cuba. Many of these were biennale events such as the Salón Annual de Pintura y Grabado in Mexico City in 1958, the International Biennale of Painting, Sculpture and Engraving in 1960, various biennales of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes for sculpture in the 1960s, the International Printing Biennale in Tokyo in 1960 and 1972 and the Sao Paulo Biennale in 1961 and 1972. In 1982 he was elected to the selection committee for the Triennial of Sculpture.

Sjölander’s works can be found in the collection of the National Museum of Sweden, the Modern Art Museum of Stockholm, the Tessin Museum in Paris, the Gothenburg Museum, the Museo de Arte Moderno, the Palacio de Bellas Artes, the National Museum of Rhodesia and the Casa de las Américas in Cuba.

In addition to producing art for which he never accepted the help of a patron, Sjölander also taught at the Escuela Nacional de Pintura, Escultura y Grabado "La Esmeralda" (1971-1985) and at the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas (1977-1985). In 1985 he joined the Centro de Investigación y Experimentación Plástica.

Sjölander’s work was recognized with various distinctions during his lifetime, including Knight’s Decoration First Class from his home country of Sweden in 1959, membership in the Order of Saint Michael in France in the 1960s along with membership in the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana. He received the Xipe-Totec award at the First National Sculpture Biennale in 1962 and the first sculpture prize from the Salon de la Plástica Mexicana in 1971. Retrospectives of his work include one at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in 1985, one from the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in 1991 and at the Museo Dolores Olmedo in 1998.

Artistry

Sjölander painted, sculpted and did printmaking during his career, designing over 500 of the tools he used. In painting he worked in oils and in printing he worked in etching, dry point, lithography and monotype . He sculpted three dimensional works along with reliefs (his specialty) in plaster, bronze and wood, with wood his most expressive medium. He often obtained his materials on his travels in Mexico, such as mahogany from Veracruz.

The artist’s work, especially his painting, is noted for its use of color. In Sweden his was a member of a group called the “Colorists of Gothenburg” as an art movement in that country, which experimented with colors not before used there. When he arrived to Mexico, nature and the colors common in Mexico were very different from his home country and changes to his art began almost immediately, although in both places nature played a dominant role. His earlier work used bolder colors than later work, which became more subtle and delicate. Fernando Gamboa wrote that “His autonomy lies in his color, in the rich hues that never shatter the surface of the painting; the balance and originality of his sculptures reveal a unique resolution of form and style.

A large number of his paintings, reliefs and engraving relate to man and landscape, with only a few portraits such as one of his wife, Aurora, in 1952. His early work was more figurative, showing influence from Edward Munch (who he met in Oslo), ]Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse and Pierre Bonnard and northern European Expressionism, due to his formal training. Although he was of the age of the Mexican Muralists, in Mexico he became part of the following Generación de la Ruptura. His work gradually became less figurative. By the end of the 1950s and early 1960s, the human figure began to divide and by the 1970s and early 1980s he work was more of an abstract analysis of form with silhouettes.

External links

References

  1. Gustav Waldemar Sjölander
  2. ^ "Waldemar Sjolander" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Artes e Historia magazine. Retrieved October 23, 2013.
  3. ^ María Teresa Favela (2003). "Waldemar Sjolander El Gran Colorista" (PDF). Addenda (in Spanish). Mexico: CENIDIAP. Retrieved October 23, 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Guillermo Tovar de Teresa (1996). Repertory of Artists in Mexico: Plastic and Decorative Arts. Vol. III. Mexico City: Grupo Financiero Bancomer. p. 294. ISBN 968 6258 56 6.
Past and present members of the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana
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