Ásmundur Sveinsson
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Ásmundur Sveinsson (20 May 1893 – 9 December 1982) was an Icelandic sculptor, whose works include “ Thor's gavel”, the ornate gavel used by the
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of
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.


Early years

Ásmundur Sveinsson was born in Kolsstadir in West Iceland on 20 May 1893. In 1915 he moved to
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where he enrolled in the Technical College of Iceland and apprenticed with sculptor Ríkarður Jónsson for four years. In 1919 he relocated to Copenhagen, Denmark, and from there to
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, where he enrolled in the Academy of Fine Arts where he remained for six years, much of it spent studying with sculptor
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. In 1924 he married sculptor Gunnfríður Jónsdóttir. He and Gunnfríður divorced several years later. After graduating from the Academy, Ásmundur moved to
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where he continued his study, here under the sculptor Charles Despiau.


Work

Ásmundur returned to Iceland in 1929 and began producing a series of abstracted figurative works. His themes were often men and women at work and included such pieces as, ''The Blacksmith'', ''The Washer Women,'' and ''The Water Carrier''. During the 1940s Ásmundur's work moved even farther away from the human and animal form that had been his mainstay until then and by the 1950s he was producing work that was almost entirely abstract. Like many Icelandic artists, he drew upon the traditions of his native country when seeking subjects to inspire him. In 1939, for example, Ásmundur's sculpture of Guðríðr Þorbjarnardóttir and her son Snorri was displayed at the New York World's Fair. Casts of his original smaller scuplture of the pair were later installed in Iceland, at both Glaumbær and Laugarbrekka, and gifted to the Canadian government and the Vatican. Other works of Ásmundur's drawing on Icelandic traditions include ''Trollwoman'' (1948), ''Head Ransom'' (1948), based on a poem that Egil Skallagrimsson purportedly composed to save his own head, and ''Hel-Ride'' (1944) taken from the
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of Snorri Sturlusson. His ''Sæmundur and the Seal'', also in this vein, is situated in front of the main building of the
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in Reykjavík. Generally, the artist believed in placing works of art not only in the hands of a small elite, but also in making them accessible to the public. Other works of Ásmundur Sveinsson are to be found on the hill Öskjuhlíð near Perlan in Reykjavík or at the farm of Borg á Mýrum near Borgarnes. The abstract sculpture here represents the saga hero Egill having his dead son in his arms. The title Sonartorrek is referring to a poem which Egill Skallagrimsson wrote about this scene. Ásmundur died in Reykjavík on 9 December 1982. In 2015, his statue of poet
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was moved to a spot near
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house in Reykjavik, where the poet had lived.


Ásmundarsafn

The former house of the artist in Laugardalur, Reykjavík, has been installed as a museum, called Ásmundarsafn. The house was constructed from 1942 until ca. 1958 in three parts, based on designs drawn by the artist who was a fan of the
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style. He lived there through most of his life with his second wife, Ingrid Sveinsson. The house is slightly reminiscent of
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and his chapel of Ronchamp. The sculpture garden nearby is open to public.


See also

*
List of Icelandic visual artists Art has existed in Iceland since the first settlements, but it was only at the beginning of the 20th century that Icelandic artists came to an international reputation. Mostly, they had studied in other countries, e.g. in Denmark. The most import ...
*
Reykjavik Art Museum Reykjavik Art Museum ( ; founded in 1973) is the largest visual art institution in Iceland. It occupies three locations in Reykjavík; Hafnarhús by the old harbour Kjarvalsstaðir by Klambratún and Ásmundarsafn in Laugardalur The Museu ...


References


External links

* http://artmuseum.is/asmundarsafn * http://www.borgarfjordur.com/pages/p7.html {{DEFAULTSORT:Sveinsson, Asmundur Asmundur Sveinsson 1893 births 1982 deaths Asmundur Sveinsson 20th-century Icelandic sculptors