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Axel Törneman

Johan Axel Gustaf Törneman (28 October 1880 – 26 December 1925) was one of Sweden's earliest modernist painters. Born in Persberg, Värmland, in Sweden, he grew to work in several modernist styles, was one of the first Swedish expressionist artists, and became a part of the international avant-garde in art after embracing more abstract art styles in Germany and France that were evolving there during the early 1900s. He created his most famous paintings, Night Café I and II, and Trait, in France in 1905. These night café paintings, made from studies in the Place Pigalle, and in other nightclubs popular with artists such as Café du Rat Mort (Dead Rat Café), are seen as two of Swedish modernism's most important works, and are considered breakthrough work of Swedish modernism.

Axel Törneman
Axel Törneman, in Nordisk familjebok
Born
Johan Axel Gustaf Törneman

(1880-10-28)28 October 1880
Persberg, Värmland, Sweden
Died26 December 1925(1925-12-26) (aged 45)
Stockholm, Sweden
NationalitySwedish
EducationVärmland School of Art, Kunstakademie München,
Adolf Hölzel, Académie Julian
Known forModern art, Painting; graphic design
MovementModernism, Expressionism
SpouseGudrun Høyer-Ellefsen
Självporträtt med pipa (self-portrait with pipe), 1916

Törneman gained international stature in 1905 at the Salon d'Automne in Paris with Trait I, and with his Narragansett Café in 1906. He went on to paint murals and decorations in public buildings such as the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) and Stockholm City Hall, and other Stockholm buildings such as Norra Latin, Ragnar Östberg's Östermalms läroverkl, and the second chamber in the Parliament House. Törneman's paintings were recognized with a gold medal at the U.S. Panama–Pacific International Exposition, in San Francisco in 1915. Törneman died in Stockholm at age 45 after only a further decade of creative work.

Education, travel, and early work

Johan Axel Gustaf Törneman was born on 28 October 1880 in Persberg, Värmland Sweden, the son of John Algot Törneman, an engineer at an explosives factory; his grandmother was the cookbook author Gustafva Bjorklund.[1]

Törneman studied at Värmland School of Art in Göteborg in 1899 under Carl Wilhelmson, then toured the Nordic lands for a short while before traveling to study on the European continent in the years 1900–1905.[2] In Europe, he first studied at the Kunstakademie München (now the Akademie der Bildenden Künste München), then went to Dachau to study under Adolf Hölzel. In Munich he was influenced by the Art Nouveau movement and symbolism, Arnold Böcklin, Franz Stuck, and others.[2]

Törneman grew to work in several modernist styles, was one of the first Swedish expressionist artists, and became a part of the international avant-garde in art after having embraced the then-new, more abstract art style in Germany and France during the early 1900s.[1][3][4]

Career in France and Sweden

After leaving Germany, Törneman was active in Paris for four years, and also in the Breton village of Coudeville, Brittany.[1][2] In Paris he studied at the Académie Julian, where after seeing van Gogh's and Gauguin's work, he brightened his palette.[2] During his time in Paris, Törneman's friends were able to locate him by following the sketches he left in Paris cafés.[1][5]

Törneman had a small studio in Paris at 7 rue de Bagneux.[6] His night café paintings, based on studies in Place Pigalle, and a Paris nightclub popular with artists, Café du Rat Mort (Dead Rat Café), are two of Swedish modernism's most important works,[1][7] though Törneman was less influenced by the French modernists than by the Germans.[1] Three of these, his most famous paintings, Night Café I and II, and Trait, he painted in 1905 while in France. Törneman gained international stature in that same year, in the Salon d'Automne in Paris, for Trait I,[1] and for Narragansett Café in 1906.[2]

Returning from the continent, he moved to Stockholm, to Katarinavägen, next door to the studio of main competitor and critic of his work, Isaac Grünewald.[2] Although another of his studios (on Södermalm in Stockholm) was in the same building as the sculptor and fellow Värmlander Christian Eriksson, he did not work with Eriksson's group at the Rackstad colony in Arvika.[1] Some of Törneman's contemporaries included Sigrid Hjertén (1885–1948), Gösta Von Hennigs (1866–1941) and Leander Engström (1886–1927).[8]

Törneman was recognized with a gold medal at the U.S. Panama–Pacific International Exposition, in San Francisco in 1915.[9] Törneman traveled intermittently in relation to his art (e.g., in 1912, to Venice),[7][10] and toward the end of his life, he largely abandoned his early dark palette, and instead worked almost entirely in the brighter colors from his Paris days.[1]

 
De elektriska strömmarna in the ceiling of lecture hall E1, KTH, Stockholm. The ventilation duct has been fitted with a suitable ventilator.

Mural work

In addition to his many paintings on canvas, at various times in his career Törneman produced illustrations for commercial projects, as well as painting frescos and large scale murals in public spaces,[1][2] such as the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm City Hall, other Stockholm buildings such as Norra Latin, Östermalms läroverk, Östra Real, and the second chamber of the Parliament House.[1][11] Törneman began the ceiling mural De elektriska strömmarna (The electric currents), in 1918 in a lecture hall of the KTH.[12] This very ambitions painting project was a subject of much discussion, and when completed was unanimously praised by critics, but disappeared from view until its rediscovery.[12]

During the 1950s, the ceiling painting De elektriska disappeared, having been hidden behind a new ceiling during a renovation; with time, speculation arose that it had been destroyed during construction at its KTH site.[12] After nearly 40 years, and its being near forgotten, De elektriska was found during 1993 repairs to its original building, intact, though a ventilation duct had been installed through it.[12] The painting, still considered an important part of Swedish cultural heritage, was restored and moved—a thin layer of it was removed with great care and affixed to a new support in its new location—work that took a year and cost five-times as much as commission for the original artwork; it re-opened to the public in its new location, in 1994.[where?][12]

Personal life

Törneman married the Norwegian chanteuse Gudrun Høyer-Ellefsen (1875-1963), whom he had met in Paris during his time there, in 1908.[2] His son Algot Törneman, later became an artist in his own right, and it was he who Törneman pictured in his 1921 painting Algot med teddybjörn (Algot with teddybear). Axel Törneman died in Stockholm at 45, after several hospitalizations, from gastrointestinal causes (assigned at the time as bleeding ulcers).[1]

Legacy

Törneman has been referred to as "[o]ne of the most important pioneers of Swedish art".[1] Törneman's letters, some sketchbooks, paintings, and some of his personal belongings are preserved at the Kungliga biblioteket ("Royal Library"), in the National Library of Sweden, in Stockholm.[13]

In 1965 the Moderna Museet, in Stockholm ("Modern Museum", a museum of modern art) held a major retrospective exhibition of his work, 40 years after his death.[2]

Selected works

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Säll, Jonna, (in Swedish, EN title: "One of the most important pioneers of Swedish art"), Nya Wermlands-Tidningen, nwt.se culture section, June 18, 2011, via archive.org. Accessed 2015-11-16. (Google translate. Accessed 2015-11-16.)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Gerlanius, Hans Alexander, , biographical entry at Konstnärslexikonett Amanda (online biographical dictionary of Swedish/Nordic artists, in Swedish) via archive.org. Accessed 2015-11-16. (Google translate).
  3. ^ Brinton, Christian, The Swedish art exhibition, Brooklyn Museum, 1916, p. 20. Accessed 2012-12-19.[dead link]
  4. ^ Röstorp, Vibeke, (Swedish and Norwegian Artists in France from 1889 to 1908, The Myth of Return), PhD thesis, univ-paris4.fr, 2011, p. 7, via archive.org. Accessed 2012-12-19. (in French) (Google translate)
  5. ^ Landi, Ann, Auto-Destructive Tendencies, "Whether by burning, cutting, shredding, or simply leaving them at the curb, artists have various reasons for disposing of their own work", ARTnews, artnews.com, 24 December 2012. Accessed 2013-1-10. See also, Livingston, Paisley, and Archer, Carol, Artistic Collaboration and the Completion of Works of Art, British Journal of Aesthetics, 50(4), October 2010, pp. 439–455, Oxford University Press. Accessed 2013-1-10. doi:10.1093/aesthj/ayq029; and Unfinished creative work.
  6. ^ Norlind, Ernst, Axel Törneman, in Intermezzon och bagateller, Albert Bonniers Förlag, Stockholm 1907, pp. 61-83 at 75. Accessed 2015-11-16. A narrative by a fellow Parisian ex-pat artist about Törneman's years in Paris, illustrated with a caricature of Törneman at work with caption: Några anteckningar om vännen och vapenbrodern i kampen för den unga konsten. Sångerskan, Gudrun Høyer-Ellefsen, tillägnade; ("Axel Törneman, Some notes about your friends and brothers in arms in the fight for avant garde art") and signed "Gudrun Høyer-Ellefsen" (his wife); (whole Google book.)
  7. ^ a b Axel Törneman 2015-11-18 at the Wayback Machine, Bukowskis' artist record. Accessed 2015-11-16.
  8. ^ Gösta von Hennigs, Spansk dans listing at auktionsverket.com, Lot number 665 accompanying text; and Leander Engström, Falken, regnbågen, Lot 690 accompanying text. Accessed 2013-1-11.
  9. ^ Williams, Michael, A brief guide to the Department of Fine Arts: Panama–Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, CA: Wahlgreen, 1915, p. 61. Accessed 2015-11-16.
  10. ^ Scenes from Venice (1912) was auctioned in December 2012. Accessed 2015-11-16.
  11. ^ Bonetto, Cristian, Stockholm: encounter, Lonely Planet Encounter Series, Lonely Planet, 2007, p. 41. ISBN 9781741792102.
  12. ^ a b c d e Lindqvist, Svante,. Archived from the original on 2010-03-28. Retrieved 2012-12-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), Industriminne, Industrial Heritage Society, The Journal Nordic Museology, 2:2003, pp. 27–50 at pp. 35–41. Partial archive of the original via archive.org. Accessed 2012-12-19. Full issue 2:2003 (in Swedish). Accessed 2015-11-30.
  13. ^ Törneman's collection, SE S-HS ACC1994/76, Manuscript Division, National Library of Sweden. Accessed 2020-04-10.
  14. ^ . Accessed 2012-12-19. (in Swedish) (Google translate)

Further reading

Exhibition catalogs

  • Axel Törneman och kvinnan, Moderna museet, Exhibition Catalog, Stockholm, 1965. OCLC 3138236.
  • Moser, Claes, and Newall, Christopher, Axel Törneman, an Eccentric Swedish Colourist: 17 May to 1 June 1989, Leighton House Museum. (exhibition catalog) OCLC 77608134
  • Söderlund, Göran, ed., Axel Törneman. Millesgården, Stockholm, 1990. Cat. no. 24. (exhibition catalog) ISBN 9789187340222.
  • Theorell, Anita, et al., Axel Törneman, Millesgården, Stockholm, 1990. (utställningskatalog) (exhibition catalog).

Other works

  • Axel Törneman : artist file, study photographs and reproductions of works of art with accompanying documentation 1920–2000, Frick Art Reference Library of The Frick Collection. Accessed 2012-12-19. OCLC 84495008
  • Theorell, Anita, Studier kring Axel Törnemans Riksdagshus Målningar, (Studies on Axel Törneman Parliament building's Paintings; academic dissertation), Stockholm, 1973 (Museum Stavanger Biblioteket, Norway, (STAVMUS, bibl, 75(485))).
  • Källström, Magnus, Nattcafé. Om Axel Törnemans tid i Paris 1902 – 1906, Stockholm 1988. (Night Café. Axel Törnemans's time in Paris)
  • Källström, Magnus, Torgny Lagman: Axel Törnemans ma°lningar i riksdagshuset, (Parliament House), Stockholm, Sandler, 1990. ISBN 9789187790201.
  • Rausing, Birgit, et al., Signums svenska konsthistoria, Konsten 1890 – 1915, Lund 2001, s. 283ff, (Signums Swedish art history). ISBN 9789187896460.
  • Axel Törneman, Search, New York Art Resources Consortium, arcade.nyarc.org. Accessed 2012-12-20.

External links

  • Swedish National Museum, Törneman items. Accessed 2015-11-16.
  • Troll Painters, Axel Törneman (1880–1925), short essay on the work The Troll King and the Princess, 1905. Accessed 2012-12-19.
  • Norra Latin mural. Accessed 2012-12-19.
  • Galleri Claes Moser, Törneman's estate agent, also runs the JAG Acke Museum in Ljusterö, gallerimoser.com. Accessed 2015-11-16.
  • Axel Törneman Törneman works that have been auctioned, Stockholms Auktionsverk, auktionsverket.com. Accessed 2012-12-20. Major Stockholm art auction house. See also Vid pianot, (At the Piano), an unsold Törneman work at Stockholms Auktionsverk, 2011-12-06. Accessed 2012-12-19. (in Swedish) (Google translate)
  • Axel Törneman on Artnet, Past auctions of works, artnet.com. Accessed 2012-12-20.

axel, törneman, johan, axel, gustaf, törneman, october, 1880, december, 1925, sweden, earliest, modernist, painters, born, persberg, värmland, sweden, grew, work, several, modernist, styles, first, swedish, expressionist, artists, became, part, international, . Johan Axel Gustaf Torneman 28 October 1880 26 December 1925 was one of Sweden s earliest modernist painters Born in Persberg Varmland in Sweden he grew to work in several modernist styles was one of the first Swedish expressionist artists and became a part of the international avant garde in art after embracing more abstract art styles in Germany and France that were evolving there during the early 1900s He created his most famous paintings Night Cafe I and II and Trait in France in 1905 These night cafe paintings made from studies in the Place Pigalle and in other nightclubs popular with artists such as Cafe du Rat Mort Dead Rat Cafe are seen as two of Swedish modernism s most important works and are considered breakthrough work of Swedish modernism Axel TornemanAxel Torneman in Nordisk familjebokBornJohan Axel Gustaf Torneman 1880 10 28 28 October 1880Persberg Varmland SwedenDied26 December 1925 1925 12 26 aged 45 Stockholm SwedenNationalitySwedishEducationVarmland School of Art Kunstakademie Munchen Adolf Holzel Academie JulianKnown forModern art Painting graphic designMovementModernism ExpressionismSpouseGudrun Hoyer EllefsenSjalvportratt med pipa self portrait with pipe 1916 Torneman gained international stature in 1905 at the Salon d Automne in Paris with Trait I and with his Narragansett Cafe in 1906 He went on to paint murals and decorations in public buildings such as the Royal Institute of Technology KTH and Stockholm City Hall and other Stockholm buildings such as Norra Latin Ragnar Ostberg s Ostermalms laroverkl and the second chamber in the Parliament House Torneman s paintings were recognized with a gold medal at the U S Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco in 1915 Torneman died in Stockholm at age 45 after only a further decade of creative work Contents 1 Education travel and early work 2 Career in France and Sweden 3 Mural work 4 Personal life 5 Legacy 6 Selected works 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Exhibition catalogs 9 2 Other works 10 External linksEducation travel and early work EditJohan Axel Gustaf Torneman was born on 28 October 1880 in Persberg Varmland Sweden the son of John Algot Torneman an engineer at an explosives factory his grandmother was the cookbook author Gustafva Bjorklund 1 Torneman studied at Varmland School of Art in Goteborg in 1899 under Carl Wilhelmson then toured the Nordic lands for a short while before traveling to study on the European continent in the years 1900 1905 2 In Europe he first studied at the Kunstakademie Munchen now the Akademie der Bildenden Kunste Munchen then went to Dachau to study under Adolf Holzel In Munich he was influenced by the Art Nouveau movement and symbolism Arnold Bocklin Franz Stuck and others 2 Torneman grew to work in several modernist styles was one of the first Swedish expressionist artists and became a part of the international avant garde in art after having embraced the then new more abstract art style in Germany and France during the early 1900s 1 3 4 Career in France and Sweden EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2015 After leaving Germany Torneman was active in Paris for four years and also in the Breton village of Coudeville Brittany 1 2 In Paris he studied at the Academie Julian where after seeing van Gogh s and Gauguin s work he brightened his palette 2 During his time in Paris Torneman s friends were able to locate him by following the sketches he left in Paris cafes 1 5 Torneman had a small studio in Paris at 7 rue de Bagneux 6 His night cafe paintings based on studies in Place Pigalle and a Paris nightclub popular with artists Cafe du Rat Mort Dead Rat Cafe are two of Swedish modernism s most important works 1 7 though Torneman was less influenced by the French modernists than by the Germans 1 Three of these his most famous paintings Night Cafe I and II and Trait he painted in 1905 while in France Torneman gained international stature in that same year in the Salon d Automne in Paris for Trait I 1 and for Narragansett Cafe in 1906 2 Returning from the continent he moved to Stockholm to Katarinavagen next door to the studio of main competitor and critic of his work Isaac Grunewald 2 Although another of his studios on Sodermalm in Stockholm was in the same building as the sculptor and fellow Varmlander Christian Eriksson he did not work with Eriksson s group at the Rackstad colony in Arvika 1 Some of Torneman s contemporaries included Sigrid Hjerten 1885 1948 Gosta Von Hennigs 1866 1941 and Leander Engstrom 1886 1927 8 Torneman was recognized with a gold medal at the U S Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco in 1915 9 Torneman traveled intermittently in relation to his art e g in 1912 to Venice 7 10 and toward the end of his life he largely abandoned his early dark palette and instead worked almost entirely in the brighter colors from his Paris days 1 De elektriska strommarna in the ceiling of lecture hall E1 KTH Stockholm The ventilation duct has been fitted with a suitable ventilator Mural work EditIn addition to his many paintings on canvas at various times in his career Torneman produced illustrations for commercial projects as well as painting frescos and large scale murals in public spaces 1 2 such as the Royal Institute of Technology KTH Stockholm City Hall other Stockholm buildings such as Norra Latin Ostermalms laroverk Ostra Real and the second chamber of the Parliament House 1 11 Torneman began the ceiling mural De elektriska strommarna The electric currents in 1918 in a lecture hall of the KTH 12 This very ambitions painting project was a subject of much discussion and when completed was unanimously praised by critics but disappeared from view until its rediscovery 12 During the 1950s the ceiling painting De elektriska disappeared having been hidden behind a new ceiling during a renovation with time speculation arose that it had been destroyed during construction at its KTH site 12 After nearly 40 years and its being near forgotten De elektriska was found during 1993 repairs to its original building intact though a ventilation duct had been installed through it 12 The painting still considered an important part of Swedish cultural heritage was restored and moved a thin layer of it was removed with great care and affixed to a new support in its new location work that took a year and cost five times as much as commission for the original artwork it re opened to the public in its new location in 1994 where 12 Personal life EditTorneman married the Norwegian chanteuse Gudrun Hoyer Ellefsen 1875 1963 whom he had met in Paris during his time there in 1908 2 His son Algot Torneman later became an artist in his own right and it was he who Torneman pictured in his 1921 painting Algot med teddybjorn Algot with teddybear Axel Torneman died in Stockholm at 45 after several hospitalizations from gastrointestinal causes assigned at the time as bleeding ulcers 1 Legacy EditTorneman has been referred to as o ne of the most important pioneers of Swedish art 1 Torneman s letters some sketchbooks paintings and some of his personal belongings are preserved at the Kungliga biblioteket Royal Library in the National Library of Sweden in Stockholm 13 In 1965 the Moderna Museet in Stockholm Modern Museum a museum of modern art held a major retrospective exhibition of his work 40 years after his death 2 Selected works Edit Den vita bjorken 1902 The White Birch Bretagnare I 1905 Bretons I Bonden i Bretagne 1905 Farmer in Brittany Sjalvportratt 1905 Self portrait Kokotter 1905 Coquettes Nattcafe I 1905 1906 Night Cafe I Nattcafe II 1906 Night Cafe II Ungdom 1919 Youth Sagostund 1919 Storytime Algot med teddybjorn 1921 Algot with teddybear Timmerflottare 1921 Timber floaters Skuggor 1925 Shadows Trollkungen och prinsessan 1925 The Troll King and the Princess Sjalvportratt watercolour Self portrait Stadshuset bygges kalkmalning i Blaa rummet intill Gyllene salen City Hall is Built Stockholm City Hall fresco in the Blue Room next to the Golden Hall Verk i Kiruna Work in Kiruna City Hall 14 See also EditModerna Museet Blue Room in Stockholm City Hall Kiruna City Hall Swedish art List of Swedish artists Swedish language Wikipedia NationalencyklopedinReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Sall Jonna En av de viktigaste banbrytarna for svensk konst in Swedish EN title One of the most important pioneers of Swedish art Nya Wermlands Tidningen nwt se culture section June 18 2011 via archive org Accessed 2015 11 16 Google translate Accessed 2015 11 16 a b c d e f g h i Gerlanius Hans Alexander Johan Axel Gustaf Torneman biographical entry at Konstnarslexikonett Amanda online biographical dictionary of Swedish Nordic artists in Swedish via archive org Accessed 2015 11 16 Google translate Brinton Christian The Swedish art exhibition Brooklyn Museum 1916 p 20 Accessed 2012 12 19 dead link Rostorp Vibeke Les Artistes Suedois et Norvegiens en France de 1889 a 1908 Le Mythe du Retour Swedish and Norwegian Artists in France from 1889 to 1908 The Myth of Return PhD thesis univ paris4 fr 2011 p 7 via archive org Accessed 2012 12 19 in French Google translate Landi Ann Auto Destructive Tendencies Whether by burning cutting shredding or simply leaving them at the curb artists have various reasons for disposing of their own work ARTnews artnews com 24 December 2012 Accessed 2013 1 10 See also Livingston Paisley and Archer Carol Artistic Collaboration and the Completion of Works of Art British Journal of Aesthetics 50 4 October 2010 pp 439 455 Oxford University Press Accessed 2013 1 10 doi 10 1093 aesthj ayq029 and Unfinished creative work Norlind Ernst Axel Torneman in Intermezzon och bagateller Albert Bonniers Forlag Stockholm 1907 pp 61 83 at 75 Accessed 2015 11 16 A narrative by a fellow Parisian ex pat artist about Torneman s years in Paris illustrated with a caricature of Torneman at work with caption Nagra anteckningar om vannen och vapenbrodern i kampen for den unga konsten Sangerskan Gudrun Hoyer Ellefsen tillagnade Axel Torneman Some notes about your friends and brothers in arms in the fight for avant garde art and signed Gudrun Hoyer Ellefsen his wife whole Google book a b Axel Torneman Archived 2015 11 18 at the Wayback Machine Bukowskis artist record Accessed 2015 11 16 Gosta von Hennigs Spansk dans listing at auktionsverket com Lot number 665 accompanying text and Leander Engstrom Falken regnbagen Lot 690 accompanying text Accessed 2013 1 11 Williams Michael A brief guide to the Department of Fine Arts Panama Pacific International Exposition San Francisco CA Wahlgreen 1915 p 61 Accessed 2015 11 16 Scenes from Venice 1912 was auctioned in December 2012 Accessed 2015 11 16 Bonetto Cristian Stockholm encounter Lonely Planet Encounter Series Lonely Planet 2007 p 41 ISBN 9781741792102 a b c d e Lindqvist Svante The Archeology of symbols Archived from the original on 2010 03 28 Retrieved 2012 12 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Industriminne Industrial Heritage Society The Journal Nordic Museology 2 2003 pp 27 50 at pp 35 41 Partial archive of the original via archive org Accessed 2012 12 19 Full issue 2 2003 in Swedish Accessed 2015 11 30 Torneman s collection SE S HS ACC1994 76 Manuscript Division National Library of Sweden Accessed 2020 04 10 Art in Kiruna Accessed 2012 12 19 in Swedish Google translate Further reading EditExhibition catalogs Edit Axel Torneman och kvinnan Moderna museet Exhibition Catalog Stockholm 1965 OCLC 3138236 Moser Claes and Newall Christopher Axel Torneman an Eccentric Swedish Colourist 17 May to 1 June 1989 Leighton House Museum exhibition catalog OCLC 77608134 Soderlund Goran ed Axel Torneman Millesgarden Stockholm 1990 Cat no 24 exhibition catalog ISBN 9789187340222 Theorell Anita et al Axel Torneman Millesgarden Stockholm 1990 utstallningskatalog exhibition catalog Other works Edit Axel Torneman artist file study photographs and reproductions of works of art with accompanying documentation 1920 2000 Frick Art Reference Library of The Frick Collection Accessed 2012 12 19 OCLC 84495008 Theorell Anita Studier kring Axel Tornemans Riksdagshus Malningar Studies on Axel Torneman Parliament building s Paintings academic dissertation Stockholm 1973 Museum Stavanger Biblioteket Norway STAVMUS bibl 75 485 Kallstrom Magnus Nattcafe Om Axel Tornemans tid i Paris 1902 1906 Stockholm 1988 Night Cafe Axel Tornemans s time in Paris Kallstrom Magnus Torgny Lagman Axel Tornemans ma lningar i riksdagshuset Parliament House Stockholm Sandler 1990 ISBN 9789187790201 Rausing Birgit et al Signums svenska konsthistoria Konsten 1890 1915 Lund 2001 s 283ff Signums Swedish art history ISBN 9789187896460 Axel Torneman Search New York Art Resources Consortium arcade nyarc org Accessed 2012 12 20 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Axel Torneman Swedish National Museum Torneman items Accessed 2015 11 16 Troll Painters Axel Torneman 1880 1925 short essay on the work The Troll King and the Princess 1905 Accessed 2012 12 19 Norra Latin mural Accessed 2012 12 19 Galleri Claes Moser Torneman s estate agent also runs the JAG Acke Museum in Ljustero gallerimoser com Accessed 2015 11 16 Axel Torneman Torneman works that have been auctioned Stockholms Auktionsverk auktionsverket com Accessed 2012 12 20 Major Stockholm art auction house See also Vid pianot At the Piano an unsold Torneman work at Stockholms Auktionsverk 2011 12 06 Accessed 2012 12 19 in Swedish Google translate Axel Torneman on Artnet Past auctions of works artnet com Accessed 2012 12 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Axel Torneman amp oldid 1146534187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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