"Parken"
Signed Leander Engström and dated Roma 1921. Oil on canvas 61.5 x 46 cm.
Previously in Doctor Gustaf Hedberg's collection.
Nils Palmgren, "Leander Engström", 1939, illustrated p. 91.
Leander Engström occupies a unique position in Swedish art history as one of the most vibrant and temperamental expressionists of the early 20th century. Born in Ytterhogdal in Härjedalen and raised in the northern landscape, Engström carried with him a strong sense of the grandeur and drama of nature—something that would become a fundamental motif in his artistic career. He studied at the Artists' Association School in Stockholm and subsequently moved to Paris, where he came into contact with the Swedish artist circle around Matisse in 1911. It was also there that he encountered the possibilities of colour as a means of expression—a discovery that would deeply influence him.
Back in Sweden, Engström became one of the key figures in the young generation that exhibited at the legendary De Unga exhibition in 1909 and later at the Expressionist exhibition in 1918.
Particularly well-known are his motifs from Tornedalen, where he found an inexhaustible source of inspiration. The northern mountains, Sami people, reindeer herding, and the shifting Arctic light are depicted in works that pulse with life and presence. At the same time, Engström often travelled—to Italy, France, and Spain—and these journeys introduced new dimensions to his art: the variations of light, urban motifs, architecture, and new cultural impressions.
"Parken," his work from 1921, painted in Rome, is a clear example of Leander Engström's ability to unite Nordic temperament with Southern European light and atmosphere.
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