No connection to server
Theme auctions online
Curated Timepieces – December F530
Auction:
A Designer's World E1138
Auction:
International Modernists F601
Auction:
Milić od Mačve 7 paintings F592
Auction:
Timeless Sculpture E1152
Auction:
Helsinki Design Sale F612
Auction:
Helsinki Spring Sale F613
Auction:
Live auctions
Contemporary Art & Design 662
Auction: April 15−16, 2025
Important Timepieces 663
Auction: April 15, 2025
Modern Art & Design 664
Auction: May 20−21, 2025
Important Spring Sale 665
Auction: June 11−13, 2025
691
1547122

Carl Kylberg

(Sweden, 1878-1952)
Estimate
300 000 - 400 000 SEK
26 800 - 35 700 EUR
27 200 - 36 300 USD
Hammer price
Unsold
Purchasing info
For condition report contact specialist
Mollie Engström
Stockholm
Mollie Engström
Specialist Art
+46 (0)70 748 22 63
Carl Kylberg
(Sweden, 1878-1952)

The Fog Lifts

Signed CK and also signed Carl Kylberg verso. Canvas laid on masonite 68.5 x 79 cm. The frame was made by the artist's wife, Ruth.

Provenance

Purchased directly from the artist.

More information

Since the 1930s, Carl Kylberg has been a key figure in the history of 20th-century Swedish art.
In the preface to the catalog for an exhibition at Liljevalchs in 1946, Carl Kylberg wrote an appeal to visitors:
"To the visitor! First a warm welcome! There is only one thing I would like to ask of you. There is a wardrobe in the entrance hall for outer garments, and I ask you - along with your clothes, to hang up any hang-ups that consist of habitual views, preconceived opinions, or perhaps prejudices. Only then, when you have freed yourself from these lingering thoughts, can you perhaps get some small pleasure from my paintings."
In his paintings, Carl Kylberg sought to express the spiritual, the universal, and the general human condition. This "search" also evoked a strong sense of timelessness in his paintings. It is clear that Kylberg persistently sought to express this, as he was preoccupied with philosophical thoughts about human existence, his life, and his walk on earth.
In his diaries, he regularly commented on his paintings and there one can find the key that illuminates his deeply thoughtful artistry. Kylberg never strived for faithful interpretations of nature but saw it as his task to interpret the deeper underlying reality. The tree was not to be depicted as it looked and in his diary, Kylberg wrote: "I want to convince people that the eyes of their soul can also see."
By painting dry-on-dry, Kylberg creates an evocative feeling that draws the viewer's gaze towards infinity. As so often in Carl Kylberg's work, the timing is taken from the slowly emerging transition between night and day.
The work in the auction is executed in Kylberg's characteristic technique and coloring, where the warm palette is painted with sweeping brushstrokes and the contours are characteristically blurred, but they interact rather than merge.

Artist

Carl Kylberg, 1878-1952, is considered a seminal figure in the Swedish 1900-century art. He was a student at the architecture department at Berlin University and then a student of Carl Wilhelmson at Valand art school in Gothenburg.

Kylberg broke through late, made his debut as a painter in 1919 with the February group at Liljevalchs. He became known to a wider public by the age of 50, but continued to be controversial as an artist. He had a permanent artistic antagonist of Isaac Grünewald and the same year as the Nazis in Germany set up the decisive blow against Entartete Kunst and practically the whole of modernism, Swedish government stopped the purchase of the painting "Uppbrottet" of the National Museum in Stockholm.

Read more