The original: autumn panorama from Northern Sweden by Helmer Osslund, "The Lap painter", dead in 1938
Mamma good but Helmer better
Our dear Swedish media reported some time ago, at the start of this summer, that a large oil canvas by our much hyped Swedish contemporary artist Karin Mamma Andersson had sold for a remarkably high price at an esteemed international auction, I think it was Sotheby's. Well, the price for this painting, named Heimat*, was actually about €160,000 or so, whatever is so remarkable about such an amount in this our modern day art market. Many people claim to really love the art of Karin Mamma Andersson - or Mamma Andersson as she was quite simply called on the cover of the catalogue for her recent large scale solo exhibition at Moderna Museet here in Stockholm - and, sure, she is indeed a fine artist in many ways, even if I personally have always suspected that her striking name has been a contributing factor to her peerless popularity. What I find hard to like or respect is the fact that she has stolen the entire technique and feeling in "Heimat" and many of her other best known works from one of Sweden's greatest painters of the early twentieth century, and my own personal favorite of them all, Helmer Osslund, th wonderful "Lap painter", born in the Northern Swedish region of Medelpad and studied under Gaugin in Paris, until very recently all but completely forgotten by the general audience. Osslund lived a life very distant from today's trend-ridden, thoroughly commercialized art scene. He walked out in the wondrous grim landscapes of Northern Sweden, painting his sparse canvases under most streneous circumstances, blazing so proud and gloriously in the intense colors of the north (go see at our National Museum!). His career never became glimmering during his lifetime.
The thing is that Karin Mamma Andersson openly admits her "inspiration", which I prefer copycatting, from Helmer Osslund, even calling some of her in my opinion less than good copies "homages". By doing so, many art people are of the opinion that her "borrowing" is acceptable, even admirable. The same goes for, for example, Cecilia Edefalk, another much hyped contemporary artist, whose painting "Dad", a blatant rip from Dick Bengtsson, another dead Swedish artist - a typical "artist's artist" - of older times who had his greatness in the sixties and seventies, sold for far over a million Swedish crowns at the Bukuwskis modern auction here in Stockholm in the spring.
Stealing from the dead and selling for amounts with many zeroes is considered justifiable in the art world - yes, its part of the artists' "artistic integrity", it is claimed - this divine privilege which we lesser souls can never expect to ever be allowed to savour. I for one don't think this is cool, regardless of what the art people have to say. What do you say about it?
* I can’t find a postable format of this painting so check it out for yourselves.
— I should have killed you long time ago
Hunter S Thompson
Comments
Recent blog entries
- Stockholm, November 08
Nov 1, 2008 - Our world from a blogger's perspective
Sep 5, 2008 - Mamma good but Helmer better
Jul 20, 2008 - Give us back our Paradise lost!
Apr 5, 2008 - A weekend of righteous Roman pleasures
Mar 21, 2008 - Speaking about fur, moral inconsequence and hatred of the classes
Feb 21, 2008 - In the local Scandinavian fashion week rat race, we in Stockholm get beaten with a broom by Copenhagen
Feb 11, 2008 - So it has has once again come to its end: the subpolar fashion week of the industriously trend-conscious middle-classes...
Feb 4, 2008 - www.bullshit.com
Jan 9, 2008 - Watch that German suit burn, baby
Dec 7, 2007 - At last: a robot for company, comfort and assistance at the dusk of life
Nov 28, 2007 - Our Sandra's design is indeed fine art
Nov 13, 2007 - Who the hell mentioned the Man in the Moon?
Nov 9, 2007 - Greetings from sunny Cannes
Oct 31, 2007 - Thank you for that show, Helena
Aug 22, 2007 - Forget Volvo, IKEA, ABBA, Borg, Bergman and that kinky ol´ Dalecarlean horse – Inga from Sweden is by far our most powerful global trademark!
Jun 25, 2007 - Shut up and learn from history ye´ goddam kids – the good Doctor flew higher and slammed mightier than LeBron and even MJ!
Jun 16, 2007 - That was some funky brides down at Berns
May 23, 2007 - Noble mingling at the Royal Court Jeweller's
Apr 20, 2007 - Now I want to hear YOUR opinion!
Apr 13, 2007 - What a freaking art scene!
Mar 12, 2007 - Finale in style on our grand Swedish odyssey
Feb 28, 2007 - Swedish fashion fills a larger costume
Feb 27, 2007 - Dan makes a late Stockholm debut
Feb 16, 2007 - Tyler strikes back against shallowness and stupidity
Feb 14, 2007 - Johan's Darling is a killer
Feb 5, 2007 - Are we ready for WWIII?
Jan 31, 2007 - Speaking about America & Hunter S...
Jan 24, 2007 - This nasty child President...
Jan 11, 2007 - Three young men of supreme quality
Dec 8, 2006 - Oh, what a party...
Dec 8, 2006 - Tyler sees the globe through Monocle
Nov 17, 2006 - Pontus is dead – long live his memory!
Nov 14, 2006 - Two wonderful young men of superior quality
Sep 11, 2006 - Joel enters the roaring 40s – hats off for a heavy hitter!
Aug 28, 2006 - God save us from the "ID fetish"! Is it a Swedish thing?
Jun 9, 2006 - Albert Einstein, the fashion icon
May 18, 2006 - Where does our broad public stand?
May 18, 2006 - Auntie Iris hits a hundred
May 15, 2006 - We thought you'd never come!
May 9, 2006 - Go get them, Göran – let them books burn for the good cause of moral purity and spottless political correctness!
Apr 18, 2006 - Next stop Werder Bremen?
Apr 18, 2006 - Springtime is high time for Bollito Misto!
Mar 24, 2006 - Sweet (..?) memories night at PA&Co
Mar 13, 2006 - Trend? Yes. Ambition? You bet. Talent? You got it. Glamour? Well...
Feb 27, 2006 - What a wonderful visual overdose!
Feb 15, 2006 - They say time flies – but does it really?
Dec 19, 2005 - How's that for a café?
Nov 2, 2005 - Autumn time is the right time for gratinated marrow cups
Oct 14, 2005 - Starck promises to off himself – one of these days...
Sep 25, 2005 - Let's blog down...
Sep 13, 2005