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Important Winter Sale presents Helene Schjerfbeck

Bukowskis presents "The Convalescent" by Helene Schjerfbeck at this season's largest live auction – Important Winter Sale.

Helene Schjerfbeck (1862–1946) was one of Finland's most significant modernist painters. She developed a wholly unique modern expression by gradually stripping away all excess in her paintings. Throughout her career, Schjerfbeck returned to themes of vulnerability, recovery, and the inner life of humanity—motifs that clearly reflect her own experiences of fragility and resilience. Among the works that most powerfully embody these issues is her series "The Convalescent," a group of paintings that reflect the transition from a naturalistic style, characterised by fine detail and a clear narrative, to a stylized modernist language.

Schjerfbeck had her studio in a tower overlooking the harbour and the sea. In one of the many preserved letters to her friend and fellow painter from her Paris days, Maria Wiik, she describes how from her tower she could see the fishing boats returning to the harbour in the evenings, lantern by lantern—the sea looked like the Champs-Élysées. Fishermen in reddish-brown oilskins gathered to sort the nets. However, it was difficult to get the fishermen to pose as most spent their days out at sea. Instead, the choice of subjects fell on children, landscapes, and interiors. The first painting Schjerfbeck executed in St. Ives was a composition featuring white-clad girls. In 1888, she painted "The Convalescent," an interior scene depicting a frail and sickly little girl quietly observing a twig with light green buds.



When Schjerfbeck began "The Convalescent" in St. Ives in 1887, it had been about a year since her fiancé had broken off their engagement, leaving her with a broken heart. The painting has been interpreted as a self-portrait in which she sensitively processes her own sorrow. In the motif, the artist observes herself from both the child's and the adult's perspective. There is an adult's contemplation in the child's expression, and the tear-filled eyes suggest that her thoughts are far away. Yet the painting is not sentimental—its emotional tone is open and unsentimental, albeit wistful. It is as much about the returning life force, symbolised by the delicate greenery of the twig the child holds.
The Convalescent, oil on canvas, 1887, Finnish National Gallery / Jenni Nurminen


The objects, from her studio, surrounding the child also reflect the artist's personality and interests: the pen and sheets of paper, the red blotter, the inkwell on the table, and the bookshelf filled with literature. Delving into art books, magazines, and correspondence was crucial to Schjerfbeck's work and constituted a central source of inspiration, reflection, and exchange of ideas. Schjerfbeck returned to the composition nearly forty years later, in 1927, when she painted a second version in oil in her then more stripped-down and abstracted style. The child holding the budding twig appears against a strongly simplified background. This work served as the basis for a charcoal and watercolour drawing the same year. (The "Convalescent" from 1927 sold for a record-breaking amount at Bukowskis Vårauktion 1985.)

Just over a decade later, at the request of the art dealer Gösta Stenman, she returned once again to the motif in the form of a black chalk drawing executed in 1938, which served as a prototype for the lithograph she made shortly thereafter. Following that was the work presented in this auction: a final charcoal drawing with watercolour, dated 1945. The ascetic colour palette, the blurred lines, and the strong simplification of the motif also recur in the revealing series of self-portraits that Schjerfbeck created during her final years in Saltsjöbaden outside Stockholm.


When Gösta Stenman first discovered Schjerfbeck in the 1910s, she was relatively unknown, living in isolation and had long been outside the public art scene. Stenman saw in her a unique artist with exceptional modernist potential and quickly became her most important intermediary. The relationship between Helene Schjerfbeck and the art dealer Gösta Stenman is one of the most significant artist–gallerist collaborations in Nordic art history—professional, complex, and deeply marked by mutual dependence.

Stenman took an active role in her support by buying and commissioning works, organising exhibitions in Helsinki, Stockholm, and internationally, and introducing her to a new audience of collectors. He was also the one who persuaded her to explore printmaking. Over time, he became her primary financial supporter, and their collaboration developed into an almost exclusive working relationship that shaped the later stages of Schjerfbeck's long career.

The Convalescent, lithograph, 1938 - 1939, Finlands Nationalgalleri / Hannu Pakarinen.


It was Stenman who persuaded her to leave Finland during the war years and settle in Saltsjöbaden outside Stockholm. Helene Schjerfbeck passed away on 23 January 1946, and the following year Gösta Stenman died. His wife, Bertha Stenman, continued to run Stenman's art salon and continued to exhibit Schjerfbeck's works in Stockholm and internationally. The drawing "The Convalescent" (1945) has been part of Gösta Stenman's collection and was exhibited at Stenman's art salon in 1954, 1958, and 1962.

On 5 December 2025, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York will open the exhibition "Seeing Silence: The Paintings of Helene Schjerfbeck." It is the first solo exhibition ever of a Finnish artist at The Met.


To the Catalogue

Helene Schjerfbeck, 1890s, photographer unknown.



The work will be sold at Important Winter Sale

Estimate: 7 000 000 - 9 000 000 SEK

Viewing December 4–9, Berzelii Park 1, Stockholm
Open weekdays 11 AM to 6 PM CET, weekends 11 AM to 4 PM CET

Live auction December 10–12, Arsenalsgatan 2, Stockholm

Read more about Important Winter Sale



View the Work at Important Winter Sale



Requests & condition reports


Louise Wrede
Tukholma
Louise Wrede
Asiantuntija, nykytaide, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Andreas Rydén
Tukholma
Andreas Rydén
Varatoimitusjohtaja, Johtava asiantuntija, taide
+46 (0)728 58 71 39
Carl Barkman
Tukholma
Carl Barkman
Johtava asiantuntija
+46 (0)708 92 19 71