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Tove Jansson

(Suomi, 1914-2001)
Lähtöhinta
300 000 - 400 000 SEK
26 500 - 35 400 EUR
27 100 - 36 200 USD
Vasarahinta
1 500 000 SEK
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Amanda Wahrgren
Tukholma
Amanda Wahrgren
Asiantuntija, moderni taite ja grafiikka
+46 (0)702 53 14 89
Tove Jansson
(Suomi, 1914-2001)

Study for "Källskärstavlan"

Signed Tove and dated -60. Mixed media on paper 23.5 x 39.5 cm.

Alkuperä - Provenienssi

Gift from Göran Åkerhielm to the current owner in 1990.

Muut tiedot

This composition is a study for Källskärstavlan, which today can be found at the Åland Museum, and was given as a gift from Göran Åkerhielm to the current owner in 1990. On the Moomin Characters website, the following can be read about the motif and its creation:

Tove Jansson was quite adamant about separating her fine art painting and the Moomin world she created, but there is one exception: the Källskär painting from 1960. It is the only Moomin-themed painting Tove Jansson made, and it was a commission from her soon-to-be friend, the eccentric nobleman Göran Åkerhielm.

In the 1950s, the Moomins and Tove Jansson had grown very famous. One of her fans was Göran ”The Count of Källskär” Åkerhielm, a Swedish nobleman who wanted a Tove Jansson original painting to hang above his fireplace on the remote island of Källskär, located in the Southern most part of the Åland Islands in the Finnish archipelago.

After many twists and turns, involving dressing in a Swedish costume and surprising Tove’s mother, Signe Hammarsten Jansson, at home as well as flying to Paris, Göran managed to commission a Moomin-themed painting from the initially reluctant Tove Jansson.

Tove Jansson and Göran Åkerhielm became friends after this and Tove and her life partner Tuulikki Pietilä visited Källskär several times. Pietilä loved to film with her Super 8 camera on their trips, and in the mini-documentary, there is never-before-seen footage from one of their visits.

According to art historian Tuula Karjalainen, known for her book Tove Jansson: Work and Love, the Källskär painting is very different from Tove Jansson’s other paintings. However, it is closely related to the Moomin illustrations as well as the murals painted by Tove in the 1930s and 1940s. The Moomin illustrations have a function; they are telling a story, which is also the case with the murals. With both murals and Moomin illustrations, there is a clear purpose and commission to follow. Tove Jansson very rarely accepted commissions for paintings, and she did not want to mix her fine art and her Moomins. Hence, the Källskär painting is unique with its elements from the Moomin stories, which include two Fillyjonks, a fairy tale like sea creature, the shell and pearl and the pointy mountains.

”The colours are also quite different from her other paintings. It’s like a coloured Moomin illustration, which does not mean I don’t appreciate the painting”, says Karjalainen. She continues:

”When I saw the painting for the first time, I wondered why Tove had painted it. Then I understood that it was a commission from someone who knew what he wanted. It’s a piece painted by a friend for a friend.”

Karjalainen also explains that abstract painting was the trendy way to paint in the 1950s. Tove Jansson was always a storyteller, even when she painted, making her a bit of an outsider in the art world at that time. She also had the huge success of the Moomins, which demanded all of her time. There was no time for painting and the Källskär painting was one of her last works. According to Karjalainen, the Moomin world is not only a theme in the painting, but the painting can also be seen as emblematic of how painting was pushed out of Tove’s life by the Moomins after this. ”I find it quite sad, because I really appreciate Tove as a fine artist”, Karjalainen states.

When asked to analyse the painting, Karjalainen says that she interprets the two Fillyjonks as Tove Jansson and Tuulikki Pietilä and the sea creature as Göran Åkerhielm. The shell that the sea creature is holding is a gift, which symbolises how Åkerhielm is giving the gift of the wonderful and distinctive scenery of Källskär to Jansson and Pietilä. They visited the island many times, there is even a house on the top of the island still called Tove’s cabin, but it must be said that the visits did present some challenges for the couple. The visits included everything from saunas that weren’t hot enough to strict rules about having to help out with the manual labour on the island in order to get dinner, something that Pietilä especially did not appreciate. (https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/tove-jansson-moomin-painting/#85b199b0)