Johan Krouthén
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Johan Krouthén (2 November 1858 – 19 December 1932) was a Swedish artist. He broke away from the traditions of the Swedish Academy, turning to
Early life
Krouthén, the son of Conrad Krouthén, a merchant, and Hilda Atkins, was born in Linköping. The Krouthén family, from Norrköping, had worked for generations as pewterers.
When he was 14, Krouthén left school and started an apprenticeship with Svante Leonard Rydholm, a photographer and artist, where he learnt the basic skills of both painting and photography. In 1875, at the age 16, he joined the
Krouthén became acquainted with Oscar Björck and Anders Zorn who also studied at the Art Academy. In the autumn of 1881, when the Academy president, Georg von Rosen, warned Zorn that he was not following the academy's prescribed curriculum, he promptly replied that he would leave. Krouthén, who happened to come into the president's office at the time, also said he would leave.
Career
In 1881, Krouthén spent a short period in Paris, a popular destination for Swedish artists in the 1880s, but he soon returned to Sweden where he painted in Scania and in Bohuslän with its rocky landscapes. His painting of a desolate landscape with a barefoot boy on a dirt track was exhibited in Stockholm in 1883, arousing considerable attention as a result of its realistic, unembellished look.
In the summer of 1883, he joined Oscar Björck at
After Skagen, Krouthén returned to Linköping and continued to paint landscapes. In 1884, he met the then 18-year-old Hulda Ottosson at Linköping Castle where she was in a beauty contest. Krouthén is said to have been enthralled by her beauty, and she became his first model. They married in 1886 but their first child died at birth the same year. In 1891, Hulda gave birth to twins but died during the delivery. It was not easy to make a living from art in Linköping but Krouthén ensured an income by organizing a number of art lotteries with his paintings as prizes and by painting private gardens in the area.
The painting Spring in the garden (1886) depicts Linköping's Biskopträdgården. It is based on a photograph Krouthén took of the scene. The painting originally included both a man and a woman but the man was painted over and a quince bush was added. When exhibited at the Salon in Paris in 1889, the painting earned Krouthén a gold medal. Several other Swedish artists received awards at the Salon, which represented a breakthrough for the
During the 1880s he began painting portraits and interiors. Just as in his garden paintings, his interiors often include completely passive figures. One of the most famous is a painting showing librarian Erik Hjalmar Segerstéen, in his home. Segerstéen was one of Krouthén's patrons, and the painting shows him surrounded by his art collection, including works by Krouthén. Following the
Krouthén's later career, with paintings of red wooden cottages and flowering trees, was rather uninteresting from an artistic point of view. In 1909 he moved to Stockholm with his family, acquiring a studio at Valhallavägen. He exhibited quite often in Stockholm, his main clientele continuing to be from the Linköping area. He was not particularly interested in contemporary art, explaining: "Art and culture have deteriorated tremendously. Modern art is neither art nor modern. All the isms people talk about are pretty pointless if they are no more than an imitation of traditional art with a lower level of culture."
He often repainted the same scenes as his efforts to support his family made him turn to what his clients wanted. The loss of his beautiful wife Hulda is also said to have affected his painting in the years after her death.
Krouthén often returned to Linköping. For the 80th anniversary of the Stora Hotel in 1932, he was working on a number of large paintings. A week before Christmas, he suffered a stroke and was found dead in his hotel room.
Paintings
Erik Hjalmar Segerstéen's art collection was later bought by Pehr Swartz who donated it to the Norrköping Museum of Art. Östergötland's County Museum in Linköping also has a large collection of Krouthén's works.
Gallery
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Landscape
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Garden in Linköping
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Hens behind the cowshed (1885)
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Librarian Segerstéen in his home (1886)
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Shepherdess in summer landscape (1889)
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Summer landscape with grazing cattle (1901)
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Beach with bathing boys (1906)
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Three women reading in a summer landscape (1908)
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Summer landscape with wandering children (1913)
References
Sources
This article is based largely on the Swedish Wikipedia article on Johan Krouthén. The sources quoted there include:
- Ulf Linde: Johan Krouthén 1858–1932, Östergötlands Fornminnes- och Museiförening, Linköping 1958.
- Meddelanden 1958–1959 från Östergötlands och Linköpings stads museum.
- Gunnar Lindqvist: Johan Krouthén. Den ljusa idyllens målare, Carlssons bokförlag, Stockholm 1994. ISBN 91-7798-799-3.