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Eiríksjökull og Hvítá 1943 by Ásgrímur Jónsson 

 

Art Print from L.Á Museum Collection (Listasafn Árnesinga) made exclusively for Petit_Artprints.

 

Giclee printed on museum high-quality paper 230gsm with a smooth and matt finish. The Giclee print produces stunning images with a color vibrancy that is protected for 80+ years.

 

All our prints are made in our Studio in Berlin, our production is made with ECO-friendly materials. We print per order, so from when you order, it will take 1-2 weeks within Europe to arrive with printing and shipping.

 

Our prints fit into standard frames, the frame is not included.

 

Worldwide-Shipping.

NR.30006

PriceFrom €18.00
  • Ásgrímur Jónsson (1876–1958) was one of the pioneers of Icelandic visual art and the first Icelandic painter to make art his main profession. Ásgrímur was born on March 4th, 1876 on the farm Suðurkot in Rútsstaðahverfi in South Iceland's Flói region. In 1897 he moved to Copenhagen, where he studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Art from 1900 to 1903. Ásgrímur stayed abroad until 1909 and spent his last winter in Italy. On his way to and from Italy he stopped in Berlin and Weimar and saw, among others, the works of the French Impressionists, which made a deep impact on him.

     

    Icelandic nature was Ásgrímur's principal subject from the beginning, and his work formed the foundation of Icelandic landscape art. His vision of nature was shaped by 19th-century romanticism, and he remained faithful to that vision, though his emphases and work methods changed over the course of a career spanning nearly 60 years. Ásgrímur was also a pioneer in the illustration of Icelandic folktales and adventures and remains one of Iceland's most prolific folktale illustrators.

     

    Ásgrímur painted in nature and made a particular effort to interpret the light of the land. He painted both with watercolors and oil paint and occupies a unique place in Icelandic art history as a watercolor artist. He remained true to naturalism to begin with, but toward the end of the 1920s, impressionist influences begin to emerge in his works. After 1940 his work methods became more organic and his art was characterized by colorful expressionism.

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