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Gösta Adrian-Nilsson

(Sweden, 1884-1965)
Estimate
600 000 - 800 000 SEK
55 800 - 74 400 EUR
62 800 - 83 700 USD
Covered by droit de suite

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Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

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For condition report contact specialist
Amanda Wahrgren
Stockholm
Amanda Wahrgren
Head specialist Modern Art
+46 (0)702 53 14 89
Gösta Adrian-Nilsson
(Sweden, 1884-1965)

"Vit cirkel Horisontell"

Signed GAN. Executed in 1930. Oil on wood panel 29.5 x 49.5 cm.

Provenance

Dani Liebenfeld's Collection, Norrköping.

Stockholm Auction House, Modern Quality, 21 May 2001, cat. no. 621.

Stockholm Auction House, Modern Quality, 30 October 2008, cat. no. 761.

Galerie Berès, Paris.

Private collection Sweden.

Exhibitions

Liljevalchs konsthall, Stockholm, "GAN-retrospektivt", 1958, cat. no 149.
Norrköpings Museum, "Svenskt Avant-Garde", 1979, cat. no 149.
Liljevalchs konsthall, Stockholm, "GAN", 1984, cat. no 278.
Malmö Konsthall, 1984, cat. no 278.
Norrköpings Konstmuseum, "Brytningstider", 1998.

More information

The painting White Circle. Horizontal belongs to the few works created during GAN's plane geometric period. It was executed in the important year of 1930, when the Art Concret movement culminated in Sweden in connection with the Stockholm Exhibition. Inspired by Otto G. Carlsund and French concretism, GAN distanced himself from representational art and quickly aligned with the theoretical foundation of the movement. The artists sought a new visual language, liberated from both representational and abstract motifs, and aimed to create an autonomous reality in their works through the use of plane geometric forms that they perceived as universal. A painting should not symbolise or mean anything other than itself. The artists asserted that the work was thus not abstract but concrete, since "nothing is more concrete, more real, than a line, a colour, a surface."

These ideas were in line with GAN's theosophically inspired writing The Divine Geometry (1922), where he describes art as a manifestation of eternal and universal laws.

GAN was directly connected to the ideas behind Art Concret for a brief period, from 1929 to 1931. At the Stockholm Exhibition in 1930, he participated with five plane geometric paintings, Composition I–V, executed in the same year. In the mid-1930s, GAN turned towards surrealism and exhibited with the Halmstad Group at the Gothenburg Art Hall in 1936, as well as participating in the international exhibitions Cubism–Surrealism in Copenhagen in 1935 and Surrealism in the North in Lund in 1937.

The auction's plane geometric work White Circle. Horizontal was previously part of Captain Dani Liebenfeld's art collection in Norrköping. The city has had strong ties to concretism in several ways. Here, the artists Otto G. Carlsund and Erik Chambert grew up, and here lived and worked the significant art collectors Dani Liebenfeld and Kurt von Schmalensee. The Norrköping Art Museum early on incorporated concrete art into its permanent collections and has organised several special exhibitions on the theme over the years.

Liebenfeld, who was also a hotel director and owner of the Standard Hotel in Norrköping, was one of the first in Sweden to collect modernist art. As early as 1919, he acquired his first painting by GAN, despite both friends and contemporaries often perceiving this art as difficult or provocative. Dani Liebenfeld later donated several works from his collection to the Norrköping Museum.

Artist

Gösta Adrian-Nilsson is most notable as a visual artist, and he is a pioneer of Swedish modernism. He studied at the Tekniske Selskabs Skole in Copenhagen and later for Johan Rohde at Zahrtmann’s school in Copenhagen. As an avant-gardist, Nilsson was constantly searching for new influences. In Berlin, he was influenced by the circle around the radical magazine Der Sturm, through Kandinsky and och Franz Marc. In Paris through Fernand Legér and the artists in his circle. GAN was an eclectic in the positive sense of the word. He took the the artist styles of the 1900s and created new impressions. Symbolism, cubism, futurism, expressionism, constructivim and Theosophy were the colours occupying his internal pallet. He had a sharp eye for the masculine and his painting was often energized by the vitality of modern technology, vibrant eroticism, and echoes of tyrants. No other Swedish modern artist exhibits such a unique style.

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