"Motiv från Berns Salonger" (Motif from Berns Salons, Stockholm)
Executed around 1911. Mixed media on paper 20 x 26 cm.
Editor Axel och Fru Märta Elvin.
Liljevalchs konsthall, Stockholm, "Hilding Linnquist", 1957, cat no 342 B.
Folke Holmér, (SAK) "Hilding Linnqvist", 1955, page 32.
On verso: "Akvarell av mig, 1911-12, Hilding Linnqvist." (Watercolour by me, 1911-12, Hildning Linnqvist.)
Hilding Linnqvist is one of Sweden's most important naïve painters and became established and known early on for his colourful compositions. Linnqvist was a key figure in lyrical naivism in Sweden, with a style of painting that departed from the technical perfection he had been trained in. Several Swedish artists joined this innovative direction for the time. After studying at the Technical School and the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts, he was inspired by Edward Munch and Ernst Josephson's malaise art, which led him towards a freer and more uninhibited style of painting. During the 1920s, Linnqvist travelled abroad several times and his colours became brighter and his subjects more detailed.
He later painted coastal scenes and portraits, among other things. By the early 1940s, Hilding Linnqvist was an established and well-travelled artist, as well as a professor at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in 1939-1941 and the subject of a major exhibition there in 1940.