Konstnärsförbundet ('the Artists' Association') was an association of Swedish artists founded in 1886 in opposition to the
Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts
The Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts (), commonly called the Royal Academy, is located in Stockholm, Sweden. An independent organization that promotes the development of painting, sculpture, architecture, and other fine arts, it is one of seve ...
.
Background and members
The association demanded reforms in the Academy's organization, education and exhibition activities. The association's two exhibitions, "" ('From the Shores of the Seine') and "" ('The Opponents' Exhibition'), are regarded as the breakthrough for French-inspired ''
plein air
''En plein air'' (; French for 'outdoors'), or plein-air painting, is the act of painting outdoors.
This method contrasts with studio painting or academic rules that might create a predetermined look. The theory of 'En plein air' painting is c ...
'' painting in Swedish art. Some of the most important members were
Nils Kreuger
Nils Edvard Kreuger (11 October 1858 – 11 May 1930) was a Swedish painter. He specialized in landscapes and rural scenes.
from the ...
,
Karl Nordström,
Richard Bergh,
J. A. G. Acke,
Per Ekström
Per Ekström, also Pehr or Peter (23 February 1844 – 21 January 1935) was a Swedish landscape painter, known for his atmospheric scenes with sunsets, in barren or deserted places.
Biography
Ekström was born in the small village Segerstad in t ...
,
Gustaf Fjæstad,
Per Hasselberg
Per Hasselberg (1 January 1850 – 25 July 1894), until 1870 Karl Petter Åkesson, was a Swedish sculptor. He has received critical acclaim mainly for his delicate and allegorical nudes, copies of which are widely distributed in public places ...
,
Eugène Jansson
Eugène Fredrik Jansson (18 March 1862, Stockholm – 15 June 1915, Nacka) was a Swedish painter known for his night-time landscape painting, land- and cityscapes dominated by shades of blue. Towards the end of his life, from about 1904, he mai ...
,
Ernst Josephson
Ernst Abraham Josephson (1851–1906) was a Swedish painter and poet. He specialized in portraits, Genre art, genre scenes of folklife and folklore.
Background
He was born to a middle-class family of merchants of Jewish ancestry. His uncle Lud ...
, , Eva Bonnier,
Bruno Liljefors
Bruno Andreas Liljefors (; 14 May 1860 – 18 December 1939) was a Swedish artist. He is perhaps best known for his nature and animal motifs, especially with dramatic situations. He was the most important and probably most influential Swedish wi ...
,
Carl Larsson
Carl Olof Larsson (; 28 May 1853 – 22 January 1919) was a Swedish painter representative of the Arts and Crafts movement. His many paintings include oils, watercolors, and frescoes. He is principally known for his watercolors of idyllic fami ...
,
Axel Sjöberg,
Carl Wilhelmson
Carl Wilhelm Wilhelmson (12 November 1866, Fiskebäckskil – 24 September 1928, Gothenburg) was a Swedish painter, graphic artist, amateur photographer and art teacher.
Biography
His father, Anders Wilhelmson, was a "Bästeman" (a type of Mast ...
, , and
Hanna and
Georg Pauli
Georg Vilhelm Pauli (2 July 1855, Jönköping - 28 November 1935, Stockholm) was a Swedish painter, known primarily for portraits and figures. He was also the author of numerous art-related books.
Biography
His father, August Ferdinand Pauli (18 ...
.
The association dissolved in 1920.
History
Dissatisfaction with the academy
Konstnärsförbundet emerged from the
opposition movement, a resistance to the organization of the Academy of Fine Arts in the mid-1880s. The Academy's slowness in organizing exhibitions prompted the
Swedish artists' colony near Paris to plan its own exhibition in Stockholm. The matter was discussed and settled in the spring of 1884 when it was decided that the exhibition would take place the following spring. In November 1884, the Academy of Fine Arts also decided to organize an exhibition in connection with the 150th anniversary of the Academy in the autumn of the following year.
During this time, there was some friction in the Stockholm art world.
Ernst Josephson
Ernst Abraham Josephson (1851–1906) was a Swedish painter and poet. He specialized in portraits, Genre art, genre scenes of folklife and folklore.
Background
He was born to a middle-class family of merchants of Jewish ancestry. His uncle Lud ...
published two sensational articles in ''
Dagens Nyheter
(, ), abbreviated ''DN'', is a daily newspaper in Sweden. It is published in Stockholm and aspires to full national and international coverage, and is widely considered Sweden's newspaper of record
A newspaper of record is a major nationa ...
'' on 29 November and 10 December, "" ('On artistic education in Stockholm').
Letter submitted to the Academy

When Ernst Josephson returned to Paris from Stockholm at Christmas time, the artists there agreed to write a letter to the Academy requesting "action to be taken to set up a committee of Swedish artists, half of whom would be elected by the Academy and half by the undersigned, to draw up proposals for the reorganization of the Academy". A number of desirable objectives for the reforms were also mentioned in the letter.
The letter was signed by 84 Swedish artists in Paris, London, Düsseldorf, Stockholm and elsewhere. Those who signed were from varying age groups and backgrounds. The group of female artists who signed included
Julia Beck,
Hildegard Thorell,
Emma Löwstädt-Chadwick,
Anna Nordgren,
Jenny Nyström
Jenny Eugenia Nyström (13 or 15 June 1854 in Kalmar, Sweden – 17 January 1946 in Stockholm) was a painter and illustrator mainly known as the creator of the Swedish image of the '' jultomte'' on Christmas cards and magazine covers, thus ...
and . The letter was then submitted to the Academy on 27 March 1885 by Ernst Josephson.
In April, the exhibition of the Swedish artists near Paris "" ('From the Shores of Seine') opened in . It included 100 works by 18 exhibitors.
On 30 May, the Academy declined to answer the Opponents' letter and referred them to the king. A large number of them had pledged that if the Academy ignored their request, they would terminate all contact with the Academy and accept no awards from it. They could therefore not participate in the academic anniversary exhibition. Instead, they decided to organize their own exhibition at the same time. Thus the "" ('Opponents' Exhibition'), which opened on 15 September in Blanch's art salon, featured 155 works of art by 50 exhibitors.
In the summer of 1886, artists from both camps participated in the Scandinavian exhibition, which took place in Gothenburg, organized by the .
Pontus Fürstenberg
Pontus Fürstenberg (4 October 1827 – 10 April 1902) was a Swedish art collector and merchant from a Jewish family. He was married to Göthilda Magnus.
Background
Pontus Fürstenberg was born at Östra Hamngatan 26, in Gothenburg, Sweden. ...
, a patron of the arts, supported the effort. Then came the news that
King Oscar II
Oscar II (Oscar Fredrik; 21 January 1829 – 8 December 1907) was King of Sweden from 1872 until his death in 1907 and King of Norway from 1872 to 1905.
Oscar was the son of King Oscar I and Queen Josephine. He inherited the Swedish and Norweg ...
had refused their request for the appointment of the committee.
Konstnärsförbundet is founded
The Opponents, who had already agreed at the beginning of the year to join in an association, formed Konstnärsförbundet at a meeting on 18 August in Hotell Christiania in Gothenburg.
Their aim was "to oppose all antiquities which may be injurious, and to promote all reforms which may be considered beneficial to our domestic art and art industry".
One of the most pressing tasks was the organization of annual exhibitions, and as early as 8 October the first exhibition bearing the name of Konstnärsförbundet was opened in Stockholm. It included 150 works by 59 exhibitors.
The association had two co-operating boards – one in Stockholm and one in Paris (the latter dissolved around 1892). They produced a small pamphlet, "" ('What should the state do for art?') (1887) which can be considered their platform. It proposed simplifying and economizing the organization of the Academy, which would allow greater sums to be allocated to the purchase of works of art. Exhibitions were held in Gothenburg in 1887 and in Stockholm in 1888, after which Konstnärsförbundet took the initiative to ensure that Swedish art was represented at the
1889 World's Fair in Paris – all without support from the state.
New conflicts
The following years brought sharp breaks in the artistic world. The Academy's new statutes of 1887 did not satisfy the reformers, who essentially fought for the artists' right to decide on artistic matters. The question of how the annual public exhibitions should be organized was the most pressing one, and the wish was expressed that artists from both sides should unite in a single association to take charge of these exhibitions.
Money for the construction of an exhibition building had been collected since 1882 on the initiative of ('the Artists' Club') through art lotteries, one of which was organized by Konstnärsförbundet. On 19 August 1890, on the initiative of both parties, ('the Swedish Artists' Association') was formed with the aim of bringing together competing groups within the artists' community and creating a legal entity that would be the owner of the proposed
Konstnärshuset
Konstnärshuset (literally Artists' House) is a building in central Stockholm, Sweden. It is owned by the Swedish Artists Association (''Svenska konstnärernas förening'') and is used as an art gallery. History
Designed by Ludvig Petersen, the bu ...
('Artists' House').
However, new conflicts soon arose. The Academy, which had received a state grant in 1890 to rebuild its building, began to prepare for its own extensive exhibition floor. This was while the proposed exhibition building of the artists' association crept together into one room, which was furnished in Konstnärshuset. The Academy offered the artists' association free use of the Academy's new exhibition hall for two months each year, but this was rejected by Konstnärsförbundet.
The position of Konstnärsförbundet within the Swedish Artists' Association was unclear from the outset. The association refused to support Konstnärsförbundet's demands and soon there was a definitive break between the two groups.
During the 1900s
For a number of years, Konstnärsförbundet fought for its right, when participating in major exhibitions, to perform as its own group and with its own jury – an arrangement that was first fully consistently implemented at the exhibition in Munich in 1901 and which was subsequently taken up by other Swedish artists' groups as well.
The association organized a number of exhibitions in Stockholm, Gothenburg, Malmö, Uppsala, Copenhagen, Helsinki and Berlin. It participated in the major exhibitions in
Chicago in 1893,
Berlin in 1896, and in
Stockholm in 1897 with its own jury. At the
World's Fair in Paris in 1900, Konstnärsförbundet organized the Swedish art section.
In 1890, the association started its own art school,
Konstnärsförbundets skola ('the Artists' Society School'), which operated until 1908, with a few interruptions. Teachers there included
Richard Bergh,
Anders Zorn
Anders Leonard Zorn (18 February 1860 – 22 August 1920) was a Swedish artist who attained international success as a painter, sculptor, and etching artist. His portrait subjects include King Oscar II of Sweden and three President of the Un ...
, ,
Karl Nordström,
Eugène Jansson
Eugène Fredrik Jansson (18 March 1862, Stockholm – 15 June 1915, Nacka) was a Swedish painter known for his night-time landscape painting, land- and cityscapes dominated by shades of blue. Towards the end of his life, from about 1904, he mai ...
,
Nils Kreuger
Nils Edvard Kreuger (11 October 1858 – 11 May 1930) was a Swedish painter. He specialized in landscapes and rural scenes.
from the ...
,
Robert Thegerström and , who taught anatomy. Some of its students then made their public debut with " utställning" 'the Youth Exhibition' in the spring of 1909.
In 1886, the association counted its membership at 92. In 1890, the number reached 96. After the outbreak of conflict, the number was significantly reduced and in 1910, the number was down to 21 members, and artists such as Carl Larsson, Anders Zorn and Georg Pauli left. Karl Nordström became the leader of Konstnärsförbundet in its later years. Alongside him was Richard Bergh, who in 1905 published the book ('What Our Struggle Has Concerned'). 1910 saw the last foreign exhibition in Berlin, and 1916 the last Swedish exhibition. Konstnärsförbundet was dissolved in 1920.
References
Notes
Sources
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Further reading
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External links
{{Authority control
Organizations disestablished in 1920
Organizations established in 1886
Swedish artist groups and collectives