|  |     Through the efforts of Sweden's Gothenburg Art Gallery, the United
    States now has its first full-scale exhibition of the works of Swedish
    realist artist, Bruno Liljefors. 
    Liljefors (1860-1939) remains one of Sweden's major painters, and one
    of few artists in the world to succeed in depicting wildlife without
    either sentimentalizing them or presenting them mainly as objects of
    scientific inquiry. Liljefors once said of himself, "I paint animal
    portraits." 
    His works have titles such as: 
	Eagle Owl Deep in the Forest
	Midsummer Night
	Elders on Skerry
	Woodcock in Flight
	Grebe
	Gull at Nest
	Wild Ducks in Horsetail Reeds
    Only a handful of his canvases had ever before been exhibited in the
    US, and most of those came across the pond and returned home again
    toward the end of the last century. 
    The exhibition consists of 45 paintings and 15 watercolors and
    drawings, ranging in time from a lifelike oil of "Foxes," painted in
    1886, to a few of his more open and atmospheric pictures of the 1920s
    and '30s. 
    These works will be exhibited at the American Museum of Natural History
    through August 7, and after that at the James Ford Bell Museum of
    Natural History, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, from Sept 9,
    1988 to Jan 1, 1989. 
 | 
|  |     I have seen and enjoyed Liljefors' art.   The Swedish artist whose
    work I would most like to see exhibited in this country is Carl
    Larsson.  Larsson is best known for depictions of home and family,
    as well as some heroic murals.  Not infrequently, some of his work
    has appeared in Christmas cards, note cards and the like.  However,
    his use of color and the technique would be best appreciated by
    seeing the real thing.
    
    Are any of his works owned and exhibited by American museums?
    
    
 | 
|  |     From: [email protected] (AAdne Bakkane)
    Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
    Subject: Re: Odd Nerdrum, the Norwegian painter
    Keywords: modern art
    Date: 2 Oct 90 13:05:14 GMT
    Organization: Div. of CS & Telematics, Norwegian Institute of Technology
 
    Just heard on Norwegian TV:
 
    A Norwegian painter, and I think it was Nerdrum, got his paintings 
    refused from the annual exhibition of arts in Oslo last autumn. This
    exhibition shows everything of the (modern) arts in Norway, it is  the
    most important exhibition. His paintings are possible to understand;
    faces, people, landscapes. Not like most others, which looks like  a
    (often nice) mix of colors.
 
    This year he tried again, but added some paintings under pseudonym.
    Those paintings he had just maid for fun, and used 1/2 hour on each. He
    thinks the paintings is rubbish (like, in his mind, most of the  works
    shown in the exhibition.)
 
    These rubbish-paintings was accepted ! And the jury was impressed, even
    after they got the whole story !!
 
     -- 
      o    |          AAdne Bakkane
     / \  _| _  _     [email protected]
    |---|| || ||_|    Rom F260, IDT (IS), 7034 NTH, tlf. 594462
    |   ||_|| ||_     Rimol, 7084 Melhus, tlf. 872386
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    From: [email protected] (Heine Rasmussen)
    Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic
    Subject: Re: Odd Nerdrum, the Norwegian painter
    Keywords: modern art
    Date: 2 Oct 90 16:23:43 GMT
    Organization: Norwegian School of Economics
 
    In <[email protected]> [email protected] (AAdne
    Bakkane) writes:
 
    >A Norwegian painter, and I think it was Nerdrum, got his paintings 
    >refused from the annual exhibition of arts in Oslo last autumn. This
 
    No, it was not Nerdrum; it was a much lesser known norwegian painter (I
    had never heard about him before).  Nerdrum would NOT be refused to
    exhibit, if he had cared to submit something.
 
    >This year he tried again, but added some paintings under pseudonym.
 
    The pseudonym was D'erzot Rendiat (read: "Det er saa trendy, at", eng.:
    "Jee, this is trendy").  No one in the committee noticed the pun.
 
    >These rubbish-paintings was accepted ! And the jury was impressed,
    >even after they got the whole story !!
 
    Well, Rendiat's "rubbish" is actually quite fascinating - even if you
    don't take his intentions (ridiculing the artistic establishment) with
    the paintings into account.
 
    -- 
     
    Heine Rasmussen  ---  <[email protected]> or <[email protected]>
 ___________________________________________________________________________
    Center for Applied Research, Norwegian School of Economics 
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