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Bengt Lindström

Bengt Karl Erik Lindström (September 3, 1925, Berg Municipality — January 29, 2008, Sundsvall) was a Swedish artist. Lindström was one of Sweden's best known contemporary artists with a characteristic style of distinct colors, often including contorted faces. He had two children, Mariana and Alexandre. In 2003, Lindström became disabled due to a stroke and he became unable to paint. The year 2004 saw the release of a film about Bengt's life: "Lindström - Le Diable de la Couleur et de la Forme" (Lindström – A Hell of a Feeling for Colour and Form). On 29 January 2008, Lindström died at his home in Sundsvall, Sweden.[1]

The Y-et sculpture, painted concrete, Midlanda-Sundsvall, Sweden, 1995

Education edit

Lindström was born in 1925 at Storsjö kapell, Härjedalen, Sweden. He was only three days old when Sámi King Kroik, his godfather, administered the "Baptism of the Earth", where the child is placed between two roots of a tree to grant him protection from the Gods. Bengt grew up in the vast landscape of Sápmi (sometimes referred to as Lapland), with mountain ranges, glistening lakes and endless forests. He went to school in Härnösand, where he started writing short science-fiction stories, became an athlete and started to draw and paint. The Sámi people, as well as local lumberjacks, would tell Bengt about the tales and legends of the Great White North. All this created the basis for the major influence of Sámi culture and traditions in Bengt's work.[2]

In 1944, he moved to Stockholm to study under the Swedish painter Isaac Grünewald. He also participated in drawing lessons given by Aksel Jörgensen at the Copenhagen Fine Arts School in Denmark. In 1946, Bengt travelled to the United States to study at the Art Institute of Chicago[3] and was inspired there by the work of De Kooning.[4] In 1947, he moved to Paris, where he studied under the French painters André Lhote and Fernand Léger. Bengt was granted a scholarship by the Swedish magazine Aftontidningen, which helped him move into a workshop in Arcueil, France. In 1953, he returned to Paris, to a workshop in Rueil-Malmaison, where he continued the development of his unique style of painting. Soon after, he started collaborating with the Rive Gauche Gallery in Paris and Tooth & Sons Gallery in London. He developed his most known figurative art with masks, gods and monsters in France at Savigny-sur-Orge.[5] As from 1968, he started dividing his time between his workshop in France and his atelier in Sundsvall, Sweden.

Style and works edit

Lindström was influenced by and often based his work on the ethnic traditions of the Nordic world and Sámi culture.[2] He was also influenced by the paintings of the COBRA group, active in the period Bengt studied in Copenhagen.[6] COBRA was represented in Copenhagen by Asger Jorn and includes the famous artist Karel Appel, artists who were about 10 years older than Lindström.[7] Unlike the COBRA group, Lindström used his paint by the bucket, with heavy applications of mostly primary and secondary saturated colours, using his fingers as well as big brushes.

"[...] I work with extremely pure and intense colours. When I juxtapose them, it often gives the impression of 'having no soul', isn't that so? something too decorative. Thus red against green, against blue may create harmonies which must not become too beautiful or too pleasant. No, something more must be added to the work, it must have a soul, yes, a soul you can feel, in order to be moved."[8]

His work became internationally well respected because of its powerful presentation of human themes, depicted in vivid colours.[9] Lindström is probably best known for his large works, such as oil and acrylic works, mural paintings and colourful sculptures, but he used a great variety of media, including glass, dry point, tapestries, graffiti art, lithography and engraving. His most famous sculpture is probably the massive Y-sculpture at Midlanda Airport north of Sundsvall, Sweden.

Paintings edit

 
Bengt Lindstrom Swedish Atelier impression

Lindström exhibited seven monumental 3 x 2.5 meter art works at the Art and History Museum in Stockholm, "The Great Aesir Gods", depicting the gods from Scandinavian mythology: Thor, Odin, Freyja, Baldr, Ymir, Loki and Unknown God, as well as acrylic paintings about the Valkyries. He also has a series of 2 x 2 meter art works called "The Great Prophets" and a series of large blue acrylic paintings called "Women".

"I think I paint from curiosity, to find mystery and light which amaze me and which may also surprise others."[8]

Lithography and engraving edit

Lithography and engraving became vital parts of his portfolio. In the sixties, Lindström completed a series of 10 lithographs about Scandinavian mythology. He published a boxed set album, called "Eddan, Eddan, Eddan", illustrating Scandinavian mythology.

While working in an atelier in the Alicante region, he completed "Novelda", an album of lithographs featuring poems by Spanish poet Paco Pastor. One of his works, "Winter" made the cover of the first 1996 issue of Telerama, a French weekly magazine.

 
Mural painting by Bengt Lindström at the Åbyverket in Örebro, Sweden.

Murals and graffiti edit

Lindström completed several larger works: a mural painting at the Grand Hotel in Härnösand, Sweden, as well as two big frescoes for the Nacksta-Sundsvall covered market in Sweden.

In association with Sydkraft and the municipality of Örebro, he painted a fresco on a 17 meters high tank with a surface area of 3,000 m2 located at the crossroads of major Swedish motorways.

His creations also include a mural of 5 x 5 meter for the Västeras Science Institute in Sweden and a 30 meter high fresco for the town of Örebro.

Bengt completed a 4 x 10 meter mural in the lobby of the University of Eskilstuna, Sweden, two monumental frescoes on the Akkats dam and a mural on the power station facing Jokkmokk in Swedish Sápmi.

Sculptures edit

Bengt completed "Thor's Hammer", a monumental, colorful sculpture in Odenskog. The car painted for Volvo in 1980 has become an integral part of the hammer in the giant god Thor's hand.

He also made two editions of bronze sculptures called "The Wild Children". Towards the end of his career, he completed a couple of 2 meter high painted polyester sculptures, "Him and Her".

In Ånge,  Lindström created a 6.5 meter high "Tången" sculpture, made of painted concrete, which was inaugurated in the presence of the King and Queen of Sweden.

In the 1990s, the "Y", a monumental sculpture near Midlanda airport in Sweden, got inaugurated. The 6 meter high sculpture "The Wolf", made for PEAB, was inaugurated in Botkyrka.

Other art media and performance arts edit

"Men of the North" became the first of several major tapestries by his hand, "Presence", a 3.5 x 2.7 meter tapestry for the municipality of Timrå, Sweden is another. He created "Kåtan Mimi", an 8 x 9 meter Sámi tent, for the town of Arjeplog in Swedish Sápmi.

 
Bengt Lindström mural on Akkat's dam, Sweden

At the end of the seventies, he started with glass sculpturing, making thirty dishes and goblets for renowned Swedish glassmaker Kosta Boda. In Murano, he designed the "Large Glasses" series of large crystal vases and sculptures. Bengt began working on ceramics in Albisolla, Italy and he completed a new series of crystal sculptures with Adriano Bérengo also in Italy.

On the occasion of a retrospective exhibition at Sundsvall museum, Bengt painted a monumental 700 square meter canvas: "The Giant on the Mountain", which remained on the mountain slope facing the town all summer long.

Close to his birthplace, Bengt painted gigantic tarpaulins over forty metres high, covering the slopes of the neighbouring Våladalen Mountain, as a protest against the construction of a dam.  This action caused a sensation and provoked fierce reactions.

Lindström also painted several Volvo model cars and all sides of a lorry for Scania, Sweden's main truck manufacturer.

 
Bengt Lindström graffiti art, the truck, Scania, Sweden

Bengt designed two limited edition watches for Swatch, one called "Temps Zero" in 1995 and "Skritek" in the year 2000.

Expositions edit

Throughout his life exhibitions were held in Europe and the United States, earning him a solid reputation among the public and his peers. Bengt Lindström's work is exhibited in museums all over the world.

1952 : Foire Réalités Nouvelles, Paris, France. 1954 Foire Salon d'Octobre, Paris, France. 1959 New Europe, United States, Switzerland 1961 Salon de Mai, Paris, France. Musée des Beaux-Arts de Ghent, Belgium. 1966 Museum of Modern Art, Göteborg, Sweden. 1967 Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, United States. 1973 Musée Galliera, Paris, France. 1983 Historiska Museet, Stockholm, Sweden. 1984 Musée Château Comtal, Carcassonne, France. 1986 Museum of Salamanca, Spain. 1990 Centre Culturel de Brest, France. 1992 Musée de Vesoul, Vesoul, France. 1993 Museum de Cognac, Cognac, France. Vasarely Museum, Gordes, France. Pinacothèque de Ravenne, Ravenne, Italy. 1995/2005/2006 Museum of Sundsvall, Sweden. 1996/2007 Museum of Härnosänd, Sweden. Museum of Jokkmok, Sweden. Museum of Örebro Castle, Sweden. 1997 Musée de la Ville, Angers, France. Centre of contemporary art of Midlanda, Sweden 1998 Musée de l'Ardenne, Charleville-Mézières, France. 1999 Centre culturel suédois, Paris, France. 2001 Hamburg International Fair, Germany. 2008 Grönsöö Castle, Enköping, Sweden.[8][5]

The inauguration of the Midlanda Contemporary Arts Center in Sweden took place in 1996. This Center maintained the collection of the Bengt and Michèle Lindström Foundation, featuring the entire engravings collection (approximately 800 works) as well as a selection of paintings and sculptures. The collection was later donated and transferred to the Länsmuseet i Västernorrland in Härnösand, Sweden, where a special room was prepared to host "The Great Aesir Gods".

References edit

  1. ^ (in Swedish) "Bengt Lindström är död" April 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Dagens Nyheter, January 29, 2008.
  2. ^ a b Miller, Richard (1992). Bengt Lindström - Origin and expression. Andenne, Belgium: SA Magermans, Belgium. pp. 10–95. ASIN B000K0913C.
  3. ^ "Biography". bengtlindstrom.com.
  4. ^ Hovdenakk, Per (1976). Lindström. Jönköping, Sweden: Galleri Kända Malare.
  5. ^ a b Amnell, Mikael (2007). The Krimaro Foundation. Sweden: Krimaro Foundation.
  6. ^ Bengt Lindström, artworks, Biography artnet.com
  7. ^ 2010 Galerie Georgio Ghelfi, Vérone, Italie, Appel and Lindström - Due artisti a confronto.
  8. ^ a b c Tiger, Eva=Britt (1998). Lindström. Paris: Fragments Editions. ISBN 2-908066-88-2.
  9. ^ Bonfand, Alain (1993). Lindström: Entre vision et toucher. Milan, Italy: Editions de la Difference. pp. 15–58. ISBN 2-7291-0909-9.

External links edit

  • Bengt Lindström Committee, Bengt Lindström committee.
  • Krimaro Foundation, owner of the largest collection of artwork by Bengt Lindström.
  • Bengt Lindström, with a picture of the Y-sculpture.
  • Bengt Lindström, with a selection of Lindström paintings.

bengt, lindström, bengt, karl, erik, lindström, september, 1925, berg, municipality, january, 2008, sundsvall, swedish, artist, lindström, sweden, best, known, contemporary, artists, with, characteristic, style, distinct, colors, often, including, contorted, f. Bengt Karl Erik Lindstrom September 3 1925 Berg Municipality January 29 2008 Sundsvall was a Swedish artist Lindstrom was one of Sweden s best known contemporary artists with a characteristic style of distinct colors often including contorted faces He had two children Mariana and Alexandre In 2003 Lindstrom became disabled due to a stroke and he became unable to paint The year 2004 saw the release of a film about Bengt s life Lindstrom Le Diable de la Couleur et de la Forme Lindstrom A Hell of a Feeling for Colour and Form On 29 January 2008 Lindstrom died at his home in Sundsvall Sweden 1 The Y et sculpture painted concrete Midlanda Sundsvall Sweden 1995 Contents 1 Education 2 Style and works 2 1 Paintings 2 2 Lithography and engraving 2 3 Murals and graffiti 2 4 Sculptures 2 5 Other art media and performance arts 2 6 Expositions 3 References 4 External linksEducation editLindstrom was born in 1925 at Storsjo kapell Harjedalen Sweden He was only three days old when Sami King Kroik his godfather administered the Baptism of the Earth where the child is placed between two roots of a tree to grant him protection from the Gods Bengt grew up in the vast landscape of Sapmi sometimes referred to as Lapland with mountain ranges glistening lakes and endless forests He went to school in Harnosand where he started writing short science fiction stories became an athlete and started to draw and paint The Sami people as well as local lumberjacks would tell Bengt about the tales and legends of the Great White North All this created the basis for the major influence of Sami culture and traditions in Bengt s work 2 In 1944 he moved to Stockholm to study under the Swedish painter Isaac Grunewald He also participated in drawing lessons given by Aksel Jorgensen at the Copenhagen Fine Arts School in Denmark In 1946 Bengt travelled to the United States to study at the Art Institute of Chicago 3 and was inspired there by the work of De Kooning 4 In 1947 he moved to Paris where he studied under the French painters Andre Lhote and Fernand Leger Bengt was granted a scholarship by the Swedish magazine Aftontidningen which helped him move into a workshop in Arcueil France In 1953 he returned to Paris to a workshop in Rueil Malmaison where he continued the development of his unique style of painting Soon after he started collaborating with the Rive Gauche Gallery in Paris and Tooth amp Sons Gallery in London He developed his most known figurative art with masks gods and monsters in France at Savigny sur Orge 5 As from 1968 he started dividing his time between his workshop in France and his atelier in Sundsvall Sweden Style and works editLindstrom was influenced by and often based his work on the ethnic traditions of the Nordic world and Sami culture 2 He was also influenced by the paintings of the COBRA group active in the period Bengt studied in Copenhagen 6 COBRA was represented in Copenhagen by Asger Jorn and includes the famous artist Karel Appel artists who were about 10 years older than Lindstrom 7 Unlike the COBRA group Lindstrom used his paint by the bucket with heavy applications of mostly primary and secondary saturated colours using his fingers as well as big brushes I work with extremely pure and intense colours When I juxtapose them it often gives the impression of having no soul isn t that so something too decorative Thus red against green against blue may create harmonies which must not become too beautiful or too pleasant No something more must be added to the work it must have a soul yes a soul you can feel in order to be moved 8 His work became internationally well respected because of its powerful presentation of human themes depicted in vivid colours 9 Lindstrom is probably best known for his large works such as oil and acrylic works mural paintings and colourful sculptures but he used a great variety of media including glass dry point tapestries graffiti art lithography and engraving His most famous sculpture is probably the massive Y sculpture at Midlanda Airport north of Sundsvall Sweden Paintings edit nbsp Bengt Lindstrom Swedish Atelier impression Lindstrom exhibited seven monumental 3 x 2 5 meter art works at the Art and History Museum in Stockholm The Great Aesir Gods depicting the gods from Scandinavian mythology Thor Odin Freyja Baldr Ymir Loki and Unknown God as well as acrylic paintings about the Valkyries He also has a series of 2 x 2 meter art works called The Great Prophets and a series of large blue acrylic paintings called Women I think I paint from curiosity to find mystery and light which amaze me and which may also surprise others 8 Lithography and engraving edit Lithography and engraving became vital parts of his portfolio In the sixties Lindstrom completed a series of 10 lithographs about Scandinavian mythology He published a boxed set album called Eddan Eddan Eddan illustrating Scandinavian mythology While working in an atelier in the Alicante region he completed Novelda an album of lithographs featuring poems by Spanish poet Paco Pastor One of his works Winter made the cover of the first 1996 issue of Telerama a French weekly magazine nbsp Mural painting by Bengt Lindstrom at the Abyverket in Orebro Sweden Murals and graffiti edit Lindstrom completed several larger works a mural painting at the Grand Hotel in Harnosand Sweden as well as two big frescoes for the Nacksta Sundsvall covered market in Sweden In association with Sydkraft and the municipality of Orebro he painted a fresco on a 17 meters high tank with a surface area of 3 000 m2 located at the crossroads of major Swedish motorways His creations also include a mural of 5 x 5 meter for the Vasteras Science Institute in Sweden and a 30 meter high fresco for the town of Orebro Bengt completed a 4 x 10 meter mural in the lobby of the University of Eskilstuna Sweden two monumental frescoes on the Akkats dam and a mural on the power station facing Jokkmokk in Swedish Sapmi Sculptures edit Bengt completed Thor s Hammer a monumental colorful sculpture in Odenskog The car painted for Volvo in 1980 has become an integral part of the hammer in the giant god Thor s hand He also made two editions of bronze sculptures called The Wild Children Towards the end of his career he completed a couple of 2 meter high painted polyester sculptures Him and Her In Ange Lindstrom created a 6 5 meter high Tangen sculpture made of painted concrete which was inaugurated in the presence of the King and Queen of Sweden In the 1990s the Y a monumental sculpture near Midlanda airport in Sweden got inaugurated The 6 meter high sculpture The Wolf made for PEAB was inaugurated in Botkyrka Other art media and performance arts edit Men of the North became the first of several major tapestries by his hand Presence a 3 5 x 2 7 meter tapestry for the municipality of Timra Sweden is another He created Katan Mimi an 8 x 9 meter Sami tent for the town of Arjeplog in Swedish Sapmi nbsp Bengt Lindstrom mural on Akkat s dam Sweden At the end of the seventies he started with glass sculpturing making thirty dishes and goblets for renowned Swedish glassmaker Kosta Boda In Murano he designed the Large Glasses series of large crystal vases and sculptures Bengt began working on ceramics in Albisolla Italy and he completed a new series of crystal sculptures with Adriano Berengo also in Italy On the occasion of a retrospective exhibition at Sundsvall museum Bengt painted a monumental 700 square meter canvas The Giant on the Mountain which remained on the mountain slope facing the town all summer long Close to his birthplace Bengt painted gigantic tarpaulins over forty metres high covering the slopes of the neighbouring Valadalen Mountain as a protest against the construction of a dam This action caused a sensation and provoked fierce reactions Lindstrom also painted several Volvo model cars and all sides of a lorry for Scania Sweden s main truck manufacturer nbsp Bengt Lindstrom graffiti art the truck Scania Sweden Bengt designed two limited edition watches for Swatch one called Temps Zero in 1995 and Skritek in the year 2000 Expositions edit Throughout his life exhibitions were held in Europe and the United States earning him a solid reputation among the public and his peers Bengt Lindstrom s work is exhibited in museums all over the world 1952 Foire Realites Nouvelles Paris France 1954 Foire Salon d Octobre Paris France 1959 New Europe United States Switzerland 1961 Salon de Mai Paris France Musee des Beaux Arts de Ghent Belgium 1966 Museum of Modern Art Goteborg Sweden 1967 Carnegie Institute Pittsburgh United States 1973 Musee Galliera Paris France 1983 Historiska Museet Stockholm Sweden 1984 Musee Chateau Comtal Carcassonne France 1986 Museum of Salamanca Spain 1990 Centre Culturel de Brest France 1992 Musee de Vesoul Vesoul France 1993 Museum de Cognac Cognac France Vasarely Museum Gordes France Pinacotheque de Ravenne Ravenne Italy 1995 2005 2006 Museum of Sundsvall Sweden 1996 2007 Museum of Harnosand Sweden Museum of Jokkmok Sweden Museum of Orebro Castle Sweden 1997 Musee de la Ville Angers France Centre of contemporary art of Midlanda Sweden 1998 Musee de l Ardenne Charleville Mezieres France 1999 Centre culturel suedois Paris France 2001 Hamburg International Fair Germany 2008 Gronsoo Castle Enkoping Sweden 8 5 The inauguration of the Midlanda Contemporary Arts Center in Sweden took place in 1996 This Center maintained the collection of the Bengt and Michele Lindstrom Foundation featuring the entire engravings collection approximately 800 works as well as a selection of paintings and sculptures The collection was later donated and transferred to the Lansmuseet i Vasternorrland in Harnosand Sweden where a special room was prepared to host The Great Aesir Gods References edit in Swedish Bengt Lindstrom ar dod Archived April 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine Dagens Nyheter January 29 2008 a b Miller Richard 1992 Bengt Lindstrom Origin and expression Andenne Belgium SA Magermans Belgium pp 10 95 ASIN B000K0913C Biography bengtlindstrom com Hovdenakk Per 1976 Lindstrom Jonkoping Sweden Galleri Kanda Malare a b Amnell Mikael 2007 The Krimaro Foundation Sweden Krimaro Foundation Bengt Lindstrom artworks Biography artnet com 2010 Galerie Georgio Ghelfi Verone Italie Appel and Lindstrom Due artisti a confronto a b c Tiger Eva Britt 1998 Lindstrom Paris Fragments Editions ISBN 2 908066 88 2 Bonfand Alain 1993 Lindstrom Entre vision et toucher Milan Italy Editions de la Difference pp 15 58 ISBN 2 7291 0909 9 External links editBengt Lindstrom Committee Bengt Lindstrom committee Krimaro Foundation owner of the largest collection of artwork by Bengt Lindstrom Bengt Lindstrom with a picture of the Y sculpture Bengt Lindstrom with a selection of Lindstrom paintings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bengt Lindstrom amp oldid 1144801125, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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