In the Tuileries Garden
Signed Hagborg and dated Paris 1882. Oil on panel 67.5 x 96 cm.
Art dealer Kurt E. Schon, Ltd., Wien and New Orleans.
Previously in the collections at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Boston.
August Hagborg arrived in Paris in 1875 and entered an art city that at the time was Europe's obvious centre. For young Swedish artists, Paris represented both a liberation from the traditions of the Academy and a chance to reach an international audience.
Hagborg's early years in the city were largely devoted to subjects from Parisian life itself. He painted genre scenes and street scenes where he captured the city's popular life, often with narrative motifs and clear figures from everyday Paris. An early breakthrough came with "Gavroche" (1876), a scene from the streets of Paris that garnered attention at the Salon and established him in the French art world.
It was not until after these years in Paris that he began to more consistently seek subjects outside the city, but until around 1880, it was precisely the Parisian themes and Salon successes that secured his position. Through his repeated participation in the Salon, he built a reputation as a skilled and audience-friendly genre painter.
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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