Exhibition about women sculptors opens at Nationalmuseum
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Exhibition about women sculptors opens at Nationalmuseum
Märta Sparre (Améen), Two horses, ca .1902. Bronze. Nationalmuseum.



STOCKHOLM.- The exhibition "What joy to be a sculptor!" presents Swedish women sculptors between 1880 to 1920. As part of a pan-Nordic project between museums and researchers, the exhibition brings some of these sculptors back into the spotlight. Visitors will have the opportunity to recognise and rediscover some hundred sculptures from public and private settings by artists such as Ida Matton, Ruth Milles, Alice Nordin, Agnes de Frumerie and Sigrid Fridman.

“What joy to be a sculptor! Artist. Hooray!” wrote the artist Ida Matton in her diary on 10 August 1923, in spite of the tribulations she sometimes experienced in her chosen profession. That day, work on her sculpture of Gustav Vasa had gone particularly well. The turn of the 20th century saw the emergence of the women’s movement and the fight for equal rights, and women were starting to make their presence felt in various areas of society. Traditionally, the heavy and dirty work of a sculptor was seen as a male occupation. Sculptures of nude bodies were considered unsuitable for ladies. Nevertheless, several women trained as sculptors in Sweden in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

After their studies they travelled to the Continent, and especially to Paris. There, they encountered modern ways of living and new artistic ideals. There were art schools, salon exhibitions and world’s fairs. The women sculptors were adept at finding new and collaborative approaches, especially when it came to applied art aimed at a wider market. Several of them enjoyed great success at exhibitions and remained in Paris for most of their life. Others led a somewhat nomadic existence across Europe, living independently, and unconventionally by the standards of the time, in free relationships.

Their oeuvre was extensive, encompassing all genres. Often reproduced in various sizes and materials, their sculptures became very popular. But they also came in for criticism and achieved only limited exposure in museums and public spaces. As a result, many of them were forgotten for much of the 20th century.

The exhibition is the result of a multi-year project involving leading Nordic art museums and independent researchers from across northern Europe. The exhibition also has a crowdsourcing component, where the museum invited private individuals to share forgotten stories of female sculptors. Some hundred sculptures will be presented, several of which for the first time in a very long time. To coincide with the exhibition Nationalmuseum is publishing an anthology in English about Nordic women sculptors, in collaboration with researchers and writers from Sweden and abroad.

"What joy to be a sculptor!" Swedish Women Artists 1880–1920 will be presented on the middle floor of Nationalmuseum from 17 March – 11 September 2022. The exhibition’s curator is Linda Hinners, Nationalmuseum.










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