Scandinavian Home Interiors as Seen through the Eyes of Artists at Naionalmuseum
STOCKHOLM.- The exhibition shows how home interiors and design styles have changed from one era to the next, and also how the image of the home as portrayed by artists has evolved. Artists became increasingly interested in painting domestic scenes as the home took on greater importance in western culture during the 18th and 19th centuries. The home became a critical issue for every social group, and artists were there to capture the manor homes of the aristocracy, the urban apartments of the well-to-do merchant class, and the humble farmers’ cottages.
A Changing View of Home
The exhibition illustrates how the artists’ view of the home as a  place for a variety of activities – drinking tea, relaxing, playing  cards, or baking bread – has changed over time. For example, Jean-Eric  Rehn and Pehr Hilleström depicted the social life of aristocratic and  bourgeois homes during the 18th century. Toward the end of the 19th  century, artists such as Hanna Pauli and Carl Larsson often painted  their own loved ones gathered together in the warm glow of a kerosene  lamp.
From Bourgeois Parlor to Country Kitchen
The artworks have been grouped according to various themes, such as  The 18th-Century Home, The Bourgeois Parlor, Sunlit Spaces at the Turn  of the Century, and In the Kitchen Area. Oil paintings, drawings, and  watercolors are mixed with selected objects of applied art. Carl  Larsson’s painting Mrs. Dora Lamm and Her Two Eldest Sons is shown  together with a Rococo bureau by Lars Nordin – an 18th-century piece  recently acquired by The Nationalmuseum. The bureau comes from the Lamms’  home, and is visible in the painting.
A Unique Treasure Trove of Pictures
The exhibition includes some highly detailed, descriptive pictures  as well as paintings inspired by Impressionism that emphasize lighting  and color effects. Many of the works are extremely fragile, especially  the watercolors, and can only rarely be shown to the public. So this is a  unique chance to view a series of seldom-seen works by some of  Scandinavia’s most important artists. All of the works in the exhibition  are part of Nationalmuseum’s collection except for the above-mentioned  painting by Carl Larsson, which is on loan from Länsmuseet
Gävleborg.
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