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www.nationalmuseum.se Purchase 2012 by Hedda and N.D. Qvists Fund |
Here's a couple of bad-ass, black-clad art types from early 20th century Sweden:
Selfportrait with Dog, an undated oil sketch on cardboard by Bernhard Osterman (1870-1938). Osterman's work included graphic art, cartooning and arts management, but he's best appreciated for his portraits. He traveled widely in Europe, and spent years practicing in Paris. Most of his portriats are of the famous and important, and they look as formal as you'd imagine. This self-portrait is more of an experiment, I think, in which Osterman tried his hand at a freer technique and feel that was more in line with Impressionism. Was that his own dog, I wonder, or did he borrow him as the perfect counterpoint to his own black-clad figure?
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