Helene Schjerfbeck – Music (Ingeborg on the Balcony)
Bukowskis is pleased to present Helene Schjerfbeck’s significant painting Music from 1932 in this spring’s Helsinki Spring Sale, held 22–31 May.
Helene Schjerfbeck loved silence and, as a teacher, also required her pupils to concentrate in silence. She owned neither a radio nor a telephone. Yet this demand for silence did not exclude the musicality of her paintings, the rhythm of light and shadow, or the harmony of colours.
Music (Ingeborg on the Balcony) is also an image of silence: the androgynous Ingeborg, with her eyes closed, listens above all to her resonant inner self, reflected by the abstract landscape. The colours of dusk are rich and deep. Evening softens the outlines and creates a sense of security, completed by a large, pale, spherical form set against the darkness and playful arcs against the light. The mood is gentle, despite the strong contrasts: an enveloping dark green and a pale, round chord, as though released from Ingeborg’s forehead, followed by the aftersound of intersecting arcs.
“The colours of dusk are rich and deep. Evening softens the outlines and creates a sense of security, completed by a large, pale, spherical form set against the darkness and playful arcs against the light.” — Leena Ahtola-Moorhouse
Ingeborg’s figure is painted with great nuance, in Schjerfbeck’s characteristically translucent and layered manner. Nothing clamours for attention, yet everything draws the viewer into its magical sphere. The asymmetrical colouring of the hands creates rhythm, as does the red accent at the side of the blouse. The face, too, is faintly flushed and conveys receptiveness and concentration.
In the autumn of 1932, Schjerfbeck received an unexpected visit from the opera conductor Simon Pergament (later Parmet). The brief visit made a deep impression on Helene; she felt she had encountered a kindred spirit, and wrote about it both to Einar Reuter and to Helena Westermarck. In a thank-you card, Pergament had written Leonardo da Vinci’s words: “Cosa bella mortale, e non d’Arti” (“Mortal beauty fades; art endures.”)
I believe that this visit to her home in Ekenäs inspired this distinctive Symbolist painting, Music (Ingeborg on the Balcony).
Text: Leena Ahtola-Moorhouse
Helene Schjerfbeck’s Music (Ingeborg on the Balcony) will be sold in Bukowskis’ upcoming online auction Helsinki Spring Sale, 22–31 May. For further information and condition reports, please contact Bukowskis’ Chief Specialist for Finnish Art, Johan Wulff.
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