'Självporträtt'
Signed Torsten. Executed in the 1960's. Diptych. Oil on canvas, painted wood, metal 24.5 x 44.2 cm.
Burén Collection, Stockholm.
Christian Zätterström Collection, Malmö
"Torsten Andersson", Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 1986, cat. no 160.
Burén Collection härstammar från den legendariska galleristen Eva af Burén (1912–78), som inledde sin bana i Stockholm 1947 och från 1962 drev det egna Galerie Burén på Sturegatan. Eva Burén introducerade en rad betydande franska och amerikanska konstnärer i Sverige, samtidigt som hon tog sig an unga svenska begåvningar som sedermera har blivit stora namn, däribland Sivert Lindblom, Ulrik Samuelson, Elis Eriksson och Torsten Andersson. Efter Eva af Buréns död gick samlingen i arv. Dottern Catja Johansson-Burén (1934–2008) startade efter sin pension Galerie Burén 2 på Sibyllegatan.
Torsten Andersson is a Swedish visual artist who was a student at the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm from 1946-50 and then professor from 1960-66. He has twice received the Carnegia Art Award, winning first prize in 2008, and winning the Chock prise in 1997. Andersson has dedicated himself to an explorative form of painting, seeking what he terms his own language and a new path for painting. In the early 1960s, Andersson reached a breakthrough with his paintings “Måsen” and “Källan”. Later he focused on painting portraits of fictional sculptures. Known for his vigorous self-criticism, Andersson is known for destroying works that he believes don’t live up to his fullest potential.
During his lifetime Andersson exhibited internationally and participated in the 32nd Venice Biennale in 1964 and the São Paulo-Biennale in 1959 och 1983. Retrospective exhibitions of his work was held at Moderna Museet in 1986 and Malmö Konsthall in 1987. His work was featured but not limited to solo and group exhibitions at Gothenburg’s Art Museum (2008), Moderna Museet in Stockholm (2006), Zeno X Gallery in Antwerp (2003), Konstmuseum Bonn (1999), Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebæk (1997), Malmö Konstmuseum (1995), and Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (1981).