Untitled
Signed Torsten. Relined canvas 59 x 54 cm.
Trimmed. Creases. Marks. Pinholes. Marks and scratches. According to the artist's intention.
Torsten Andersson was one of Sweden's most legendary artists, celebrated by critics and peers, an inspiration to many, but also enigmatic and known for destroying most of what he created. His paintings can sometimes be perceived as careless, but for each painting he often made hundreds of sketches and studies. Then he burned everything that did not meet his standards. His self-criticism led him to “cancel” paintings that had been finished for many years and had been exhibited in several museums and art halls. Lars Nittve, as director of the Moderna Museet, wrote the following: “Of a hundred working drawings, ninety are destroyed. The surviving ten drawings provide impulses for a hundred new ones, of which ninety are destroyed. Twenty drawings remain. Of these, sixteen are destroyed. Four remain. They proceed in the working process, become paintings, with no guarantee of survival.”
Torsten Andersson studied in 1945 at Otte Sköld's painting school, at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in 1947, and from 1946 to 1950 at the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm, where he was appointed a remarkably young professor in 1960. He was awarded the Carnegie Art Award twice: first prize of one million kronor in 2008 and third prize in 1998. He also received the 1997 Schock Prize in art.
In his early paintings, he depicted portraits of abstract objects where nature had served as a model, thereby rediscovering the possibilities of painting after modernism, in a new era. Slowly but surely, he began to carve out his very own language and liberated himself from predecessors and the prevailing tradition. After many years of silence, he presented a series of paintings of abstract sculptures with poetic origins in the 1980s. Gradually, the motifs became concrete sculptures, and his canvases filled with soft textile forms and signs in the early 2000s. The language evolved and solidified.
In the 1990s, he donated around twenty large paintings to the Malmö Art Museum, which has the foremost collection of Torsten Andersson's art. He is also represented in several important private collections, as well as at the Moderna Museet and the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm and the Helsingborg Museum.
Torsten Andersson is a Swedish visual artist who was a student at the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm from 1946-50 and then professor from 1960-66. He has twice received the Carnegia Art Award, winning first prize in 2008, and winning the Chock prise in 1997. Andersson has dedicated himself to an explorative form of painting, seeking what he terms his own language and a new path for painting. In the early 1960s, Andersson reached a breakthrough with his paintings “Måsen” and “Källan”. Later he focused on painting portraits of fictional sculptures. Known for his vigorous self-criticism, Andersson is known for destroying works that he believes don’t live up to his fullest potential.
During his lifetime Andersson exhibited internationally and participated in the 32nd Venice Biennale in 1964 and the São Paulo-Biennale in 1959 och 1983. Retrospective exhibitions of his work was held at Moderna Museet in 1986 and Malmö Konsthall in 1987. His work was featured but not limited to solo and group exhibitions at Gothenburg’s Art Museum (2008), Moderna Museet in Stockholm (2006), Zeno X Gallery in Antwerp (2003), Konstmuseum Bonn (1999), Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk (1997), Malmö Konstmuseum (1995), and Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1981).
The artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.