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Birgit Broms(Sweden, 1924-2008)
BIRGIT BROMS, watercolor, signed
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BIRGIT BROMS, watercolor, signed

Skridskoåkare. 24 x 30 cm

Not examined out of frame.

More information

A selection of Birgit Brom's paintings will be presented at a Swedish museum in Uppsala, this autumn and winter.
Bror Hjorths Hus has compiled a retrospective and elaborate exhibition of Birgit Brom's works.
The exhibition runs from 28 November 2020 to 24 January 2021.

"The motifs with skaters have occupied Birgit Broms since the late 1960s. She stood next to the ice rink in Stockholm and tried to draw the skaters, almost in the spirit of Brueghel. But there was no speed, no movement. Only when she portrayed a whole bunch of skaters, the movement and the speed appeared and then she could vary and nuance the motif, in almost all infinity.
But without da capo, without any repetition.

  • The motifs were not the interesting thing, but instead the movement and silence, the volumes and voids, which work together into a fascinating unit, says Ylva Hillström, exhibition commissioner at the Modern Museum's "Birgit Broms exhibition" 2006.

At Moderna Museet, mainly later works were shown, not least paintings with skaters.

  • You can let your gaze shift in the way you see them: Here is the speed and the coldness, but also the form, the aesthetic, says Ylva Hillström and tells that Birgit Broms once happened to keep the cover of an exhibition booklet upside down, when she handed it to Ulf Linde, the museum director. However, she noted that "it works pretty well, this way too." It did not matter if the skaters was upside down, because the composition was still the most important.

Birgit Broms always captured freedom and movement. According to art historian Peter Cornell, the faceless and powerful skaters appears as angels, on their way to help someone.
Here the four skaters show a happy mood, they are confident, cheering, slipping on the ice is unthinkable for them."

Over the years, we have gotten to know Birgit Brom's skaters, who powerfully appear in the picture.
Where are they going and what are they thinking about? These are not the questions that interested her, instead she was fascinated by the speed and composition.
After careful preparation, she painted with formations and voids, to create a movement and a force.

Her favorite motif was the skaters on ice, but it was a coincidence.
When her 5-year-old daughter Helen trained skating in Stockholm, Birgit Broms took the opportunity to make several sketches of the skaters. At home in the studio, she then put the different pictures together, until she was happy with the composition and the result. Like Camille Corot, she tried to capture a fusion of multiple images, rather than a single unit.
Birigit Broms was constantly looking for new ways, throughout her career.

More about Birgit Broms

Birgit Broms was a Swedish artist who was born in 1924 and died 2008. Rhythm is imbedded into her artistry when she captures the motion of her speedy skiers. This scene is depicted so often that it has become synonymous with the artist herself. Her artistic output was modest, focusing consistently on a few themes: cityscapes, facades, archipelago boats, and ice skaters. She portrayed these subjects not merely to capture their likeness, but rather to solve formal and coloristic challenges. Simplification and abstraction were key elements in her approach, always emphasizing the role of light in highlighting her motifs. One cannot speak about Broms’ career without mentioning her portraits, a genre she did not begin until the end of the 1970s. Broms did not receive commissions, rather it was she herself that asked to paint a person if she found their face fascinating. The first person she asked was Erland Josephson, after which she received commissions from both the portrait collection at Manilla and the National Portrait Geller in Gripsholm. Birgit Broms was married to the artist Ragnar Sandberg between 1960 and 1972.

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Contact
Amanda Wahrgren
Stockholm
Amanda Wahrgren
Head specialist Modern Art
+46 (0)702 53 14 89

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Covered by droit de suite

By law, the buyer will pay an artist fee for this work of art. This fee is 5% of the hammer price, or less. For more information about this law:

Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

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