Olle Olsson Hagalund (1904 - 1972)

The Dauber's Studio

Title
The Dauber's Studio
Material/Technique
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Mått 75,00 x 80,50 cm Ram 92,00 x 97,00 x 6,00 cm
Inventory number
GKM 1202
Acquisition
Purchase, 1943
Description
From the research project “The Canon: Perspectives on Swedish Art Historiography”, 2021: Olle Olsson Hagalund is considered a naïvist, part of an art movement that appeared in Sweden in the 1910s. The naïvists pitted the amateurist and provincial against the schooled and international. By painting in the manner of children, untrained painters or the mentally ill, they aimed at a more direct, down to earth mode of expression. They often depicted their immediate surroundings, like Olle Olsson here with his Hagalund. The inspiration came from the so-called true naïve painters, unschooled amateurs such as the French customs officer Henri Rousseau. Even though naïvism was incompatible with the utopian, modern and international agenda of modernism, it had a major impact in Sweden. Naïvism satisfied the need for a local alternative to international modernism.
Signature/Inscription
Signature (Nere till vänster): OLLE OLSSON HAGALUND
Exhibition History
Göteborg, Göteborgs konstmuseum, 18/03/2017 - 12/11/2017
Literature
Kristoffer Arvidsson, Per Dahlström, Björn Fredlund, Anna Hyltze, Philippa Nanfeldt, Isabella Nilsson, Johan Sjöström, Samlingen Göteborgs konstmuseum, red. Kristoffer Arvidsson, Per Dahlström, Anna Hyltze, Göteborgs konstmuseum, Göteborg 2014., ill. p. 350