No connection to server
Theme auctions online
Systembolaget Wine and Spirits auction D065
Auction:
Björn Weckström 90 years E1167
Auction:
Curated Timepieces F583
Auction:
A Private Collection of Gibson Guitars E1156
Auction:
Erik Chambert – Geometric Art F591
Auction:
Japanese Prints and Works of Art F594
Auction:
Swedish Modern Lighting – February Edition E1140
Auction:
Selected Silver F598
Auction:
Shadows & Silhouettes E1166
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
100
72495

Anna Bergman

(Sweden, Born 1965)
Estimate
6 000 - 8 000 SEK
551 - 735 EUR
564 - 752 USD
Hammer price
56 000 SEK
Covered by droit de suite

By law, the buyer will pay an artist fee for this work of art. This fee is 5% of the hammer price, or less. For more information about this law:

Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

Purchasing info
Image rights

The artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.

Anna Bergman
(Sweden, Born 1965)

14 silhouette costume sketches.

Signed Anna Bergman and dated 1998. Indian ink. Each 22 x 17 cm.

More information

"Having seen a retrospective exhibition of my costume sketches over ten
years at the Pro Persona Gallery Stockholm 1998, Ingmar ordered some ink
drawings from me. He had seen some silhouette drawings at the exhibition,
and he wanted something in the same style. The rest was up to me. There
was, however, one stipulation: one red detail was to be included with one of
the female silhouettes - the shoes, for example (red shoes evoked in Ingmar
the memory of a boyhood crush). When the ten sketches were delivered, he
immediately got in touch to tell me that he'd hung them in a row on the wall
in the room in which he used to rest. He wanted four more paintings to fill
the rest of the wall. Ingmar mentioned on several occasions that he looked
at them every evening before taking his nap. Moreover, the drawing of the
lady with the red shoes traveled with him to his Karlaplan flat every time
he went to Stockholm." Anna Bergman, June 2009.