Street in a French village
Signed Hagborg. Oil on relined canvas 100 x 150 cm.
Bukowski Auktioner, auction 540, Internationella Vårauktionen, 30 May-2 June 2006, lot 196.
August Hagborg specialised early on in detailed depictions of folk life. Growing up on the Swedish west coast, he initially drew his subjects from there but became best known for his paintings from Normandy and Brittany in France. Since he was accustomed to life by the sea, he was drawn to the artist colonies along the French Atlantic coast. When he travelled to Brittany in 1877 with Georg Pauli, he achieved his major breakthrough with the painting "Väntan" which was exhibited at the Paris Salon and depicted a fisherman's wife gazing out over the sea. Thereafter, he continued to portray people in coastal communities, particularly fishermen and shellfish gatherers in their daily lives.
August Hagborg was also appreciated for his ability to combine realism with a atmospheric and warm painting style. Through meticulously rendered environments and expressive figures, he managed to create images that both documented people's everyday lives and evoked emotions in the viewer. His art is often characterised by a soft light and a tranquil presence, which contributed to making him one of the most successful Swedish artists in Paris during the late 19th century.
August Hagborg was a Swedish artist born in Gothenburg. He studied at The Royal Academy of Fine Arts and in France together with Georg Pauli and Axel Borg. He is represented by the national museum in Stokcholm and the Luxemburg Museum. Hagborg is most notably known for his beautiful, realistic paintings from Normandy's coast where painted portraits of the french fisherman. Yellow and red tones are stand out in his previous artworks, and he later painted in a grey-pink palett.
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