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Helene Schjerfbeck

(Finland, 1862-1946)
Estimate
3 000 000 - 4 000 000 SEK
266 000 - 355 000 EUR
281 000 - 374 000 USD
Hammer price
3 750 000 SEK
Purchasing info
Helene Schjerfbeck
(Finland, 1862-1946)

"Marta dansande (Svart kjol)" (Marta dancing [Black skirt] )

Signed H. Schjerfbeck and dated 1917. Charcoal, watercolour and gouache 67 x 50 cm. Verso sketch for "Dam i klockhatt (Byskönheten)".

Provenance

Galerie Hörhammer, Helsinki; Ruth Serlachius; Stockholms Auktionsverk, "Stora Kvalitén", 18 May 1999, lot 1291; private collection (acquired at the above sale).

Exhibitions

Liljevalchs Konsthall (Liljevalchs Public Art Gallery), Stockholm, "Hannes Autere, Marcus Collin, T.K. Sallinen, Helene Schjerfbeck samt finska ryor", 20 October - 11 November 1934, no. 310; Gösta Stenmans samling, 1967, no. 28.

Literature

H. Ahtela (Einar Reuter), "Helena Schjerfbeck", 1953, listed in the catalogue, p. 363, no. 471; (Ed.) Leena Ahtola-Moorhouse, "Helene Schjerfbeck 150 år", exhibition catalogue, Finnish National Gallery Ateneum, Helsinki, 2012, mentioned and illustrated p. 220 (no. 393).

More information

"Marta dansande (Svart kjol)", which depicts Martta Sahrman (later Mäkinen, 1903-1991), holds a unique position amongst Helene Schjerfbeck’s production from her time in Hyvinge. This is because the composition portrays a girl in movement. Schjerfbeck usually preferred subjects characterised by their stillness, where the models were depicted seated or standing.

Einar Reuter (1881-1968), also known by the pseudonym of H. Ahtela, writes the following words in his extensive monograph on Schjerfbeck, published in Swedish in 1953: "In the late autumn little Marta Sahrman arrives to dance for Helena as she had previously promised. During the summer the girl had actually been performing at a travelling village circus. But the dancing girl’s movements puzzled her. Helena has painted so many seated, resting people, she is wondering how Degas painted his dancing figures."

The idea had come to Schjerfbeck the year before. In a letter (dated Hyvinge, 4th of November 1916) Schjerfbeck tells Reuter the following, partly quoting the model’s own words: "The girl is being painted in light yellow and grey tones with something of a strong pink in the clothes, a child of the circus. It is true that she only watched over Mr and Mrs Circus’s little children during the performances (3 days), but she’s the type and has that nature. She has promised to dance for me ‘for real on tiptoes, it is so ugly to dance on your whole foot’ ". During the work, however, Schjerfbeck departed from the earlier planned palette: the composition was finally done in a more limited, sober and sophisticated range of colours.

"Marta dansande (Svart kjol)", preceded by "Marta dansande (Head Study)" (charcoal on paper, 23 x 21 cm, 1971, Athela no. 472, private collection), came about during a particularly eventful year for Schjerfbeck. In 1917 she visited, for the first time in fifteen years, the art museum Ateneum in Helsinki and was deeply affected by the paintings of Paul Gauguin and Paul Cézanne. After much persuasion from her friends Einar Reuter and Gösta Stenman, her first solo show at Stenman’s art salon was organised. The exhibition is said to have been a big public success for Schjerfbeck. The artist herself, however, did not see her own exhibition, and only accessed it through the exhibition catalogue (which included as many as 159 pieces) and through the newspapers’ reviews of the show.

The girl that Helene Schjerfbeck called the circus girl, and who was the model for "Marta dansande (Svart kjol)", lived with her family in Hyvinge. She had passed Schjerfbeck’s house together with her siblings on their way to school and the artist had noticed them and asked the children to be her models. Martta’s brother Einar was the model for "Vedhuggaren" [The Woodcutter]. The first version of this work, "Vedhuggaren I" The Woodcutter I, is included in the collections of Ateneum in Helsinki. In 1913 Martta and her little sister, Katri, had modelled for the composition "Syskonen" The Siblings. Four years later it was also Martta and Katri who were portrayed together in the famous painting "Bilderboken" Picture Book. This last image must be one of Schjerfbeck’s most famous and loved ones as it was also turned into a very popular lithograph ("Bilderboken", edition of 90 sheets, 1938).

When Schjerfbeck, at about the same time that she was working on "Bilderboken", took on the motif of the dancing Martta the result is a well-balanced composition that allows the viewer to imagine the movement of the model. Helene Schjerfbeck possessed a unique talent in capturing the essence of her subjects with a focused, and very elegant, simplicity. In a letter to Einar Reuter (16th of April 1917) she also writes how: "you do not need to repeat all the details in writing, the truth will be better revealed when you allude to it".