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Albert Edelfelts' exquisite "Shipbuilders" at bukowskis important winter sale

Albert Edelfelt's exquisite depiction of the archipelago, with the playful boys on the beach, was executed late in the summer of 1886, in the artist's studio at Haiko. The studio had been built a few years earlier, in the summer of 1883. Edelfelt's biographer Bertel Hintze writes: "In the summer of 1883, Edelfelt erected a summer studio on Haiko. In tandem with his plein air studies after nature he also wanted to pursue compositions on a larger scale, which were impossible to carry out on the actual spot, due to rapidly changing weather and light. From now on Edelfelt's larger open air compositions were mainly painted in the new studio”.

That the Haiko studio played an important part in Edelfelt’s development as an artist is evident also in the writings of Soili Sinisalo who gives us the following information: “The birthplace for Edelfelt’s paintings of ordinary Finnish people was usually Haiko in the province of Uusimaa, where he built a summer studio in 1883 as he spent most of his summers working in Finland. Long journeys of exploration deep into the forest and living in the heart of the countryside did not appeal to Edelfelt as it did to Gallen-Kallela. Edelfelt was a gentleman who was accustomed to living in Paris. For him, the local people of Uusimaa with whom he came in contact in the vicinity of his summer villa were quite sufficient to represent the Finnish people”.

Partly based in Paris, Edelfelt, for the first time, spent a few weeks at the French Riviera in March 1886. The journey that passed through Provence to Nice, Cannes, Menton and Genoa and later took Edelfelt home via Monte Carlo and Marseille proved a lasting experience for the artist who was enraptured by the colour scheme of southern Europe, of its deep blue skies and bright sun. The intensity of the experience is apparent in a letter to his mother where the artist writes: "When the sun is bathing everything and the sea is clear blue behind, it is a pleasure and pure bliss to look at all this ‘délire de couleurs’ ".

Bertel Hintze, once again, has stated that Edelfelt's painting from the period "is entirely in tune with the Impressionist rendering of natural light. The capturing of the fleeting moment, the pure, shining colour [...] against the pearly gray tones of the sun glittering on the surface of the water, the soft atmosphere that sweeps the background and clads it in a silvery haze, the swift brushstrokes, which seem to be permeated by sunshine and warm trembling air".

When the painting was shown at Edelfelt's exhibition in Helsinki in the fall of 1886, the newspapers singularly praised the artist’s "glorious rendering of sunlight" and "the depiction of transparent air". The largest painting, the present lot "Shipbuilders", received the following praise by an enthusiastic reviewer: "rarely, did you see a more superior treatment of light, rarely has an artist in a happier way captured the characteristics of a clear Nordic summer day ". Hintze concludes: "In these works from the summer of 1886, Edelfelt has reached one of his goals: to capture and reproduce the archipelago's distinctive, clear atmosphere, in which colours appear with a distinctive sharpness, which is fundamentally strange to contemporary French painting, characterized by the moisture-saturated air and the faint light of the plains around Paris. In these works we’re faced, for the first time, with an impressionistic painting that completely expresses the distinct and unique character of Finland's own nature”.


AT BUKOWSKIS IMPORTANT WINTER SALE
VIEWING: 30 November – 4 December at Bukowskis, Berzelii Park 1, Stockholm
Mon–Fri 11 AM – 6 PM, Sat–Sun 11 AM – 5 PM.
SALE: 5 – 6 December at Arsenalsgatan 2, Stockholm.

332. Albert Edelfelt, "Shipbuilders".
332. Albert Edelfelt, "Shipbuilders".
Hammer price 
4 000 000 SEK
Estimate
2 800 000 - 3 200 000 SEK

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