"Brinnande jord"
Signed E. Thoresen and dated -45. Panel 38 x 46 cm.
Engineer Egon Östlund's collection.
Private collection.
Compare with the motif "Brændende Jord", 1946, deposited at the Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen.
The artist Elsa Thoresen was born in the USA but of Norwegian descent. She lived for a few years in Oslo, where she also received her education. For a period, she also studied at the Academie des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, Belgium. Subsequently, Thoresen moved to Denmark, where she married the artist Vilhelm Bjerke Petersen. They were both central figures in the radical Danish surrealism, a group that directed its efforts against the Nazi German occupiers during the war. However, they managed to escape to Sweden, where they became closely associated with the artists of the Halmstad Group.
Thoresen was notably appreciated by the leading figure of international surrealism, André Breton. He selected works by her for the movement's major exhibitions in 1938 and 1947. After fleeing to Sweden, she worked both in Sweden and Denmark for a few years but returned to the USA in 1953. Over the years, Elsa Thoresen faded into obscurity, but in recent years, her artistic career has been rediscovered. In 2018, the public was able to see a presentation of her works for the first time in many years at the exhibition Women’s Surrealism at Kunstforeningen Gl. Stranden and the art museum in Tønder, Denmark, and at Mjellby Art Museum in Sweden.