Anna Ancher

Anna Ancher (18 August 1859 – 15 April 1935) was a Danish artist associated with the Skagen Painters, an artist colony on the northern point of Jylland, Denmark.

She is considered to be one of Denmark's greatest visual artists.

Anna Ancher
Anna Ancher
Photo by Frederik Riise
Born
Anna Kirstine Brøndum

(1859-08-18)18 August 1859
Skagen, Denmark
Died15 April 1935(1935-04-15) (aged 75)
Skagen, Denmark
NationalityDanish
EducationVilhelm Kyhn College of Painting
Pierre Puvis de Chavannes
Known forPainting
Notable workSunlight in the Blue Room
MovementImpressionist
AwardsIngenio et Arti
Tagea Brandt Rejselegat

Background

Anna Ancher 
Anna Ancher, self-portrait, c. 1877–78

Anna Kirstine Brøndum was born in Skagen, Denmark, the daughter of Ane Hedvig Møller (1826–1916) and Erik Andersen Brøndum (1820–1890). She was the only one of the Skagen Painters who was born and grew up in Skagen, where her father owned the Brøndums Hotel. The artistic talent of Anna Ancher became obvious at an early age and she became acquainted with pictorial art via the many artists who settled to paint in Skagen, in the north of Jylland.

While she studied drawing for three years at the Vilhelm Kyhn College of Painting in Copenhagen, she developed her own style and was a pioneer in observing the interplay of different colors in natural light. She also studied drawing in Paris at the atelier of Pierre Puvis de Chavannes along with Marie Triepcke, who would marry Peder Severin Krøyer, another Skagen painter.

In 1880 she married fellow painter Michael Ancher, whom she met in Skagen. They had one child, daughter Helga Ancher. Despite pressure from society that married women should devote themselves to household duties, she continued painting after marriage.

Career

Anna Ancher was considered to be one of the great Danish pictorial artists by virtue of her abilities as a character painter and colorist. Her art found its expression in Nordic art's modern breakthrough toward a more truthful depiction of reality, e.g. in Blue Ane (1882) and The Girl in the Kitchen (1883–1886).

Style

Ancher preferred to paint interiors and simple themes from the everyday lives of the Skagen people, especially fishermen, women, and children. She was intensely preoccupied with exploring light and color, as in Interior with Clematis (1913). She also created more complex compositions such as A Funeral (1891). Anna Ancher's works often represented Danish art abroad. Ancher has been known for portraying similar civilians from the Skagen art colony in her works, including an old blind woman.

Anna Ancher has been praised for her painting entitled, Sørg (1902), which depicts a blonde long-haired, naked woman on one side of the work, a funerary cross in the middle, and an older pious woman draped in black clothing. The religious context of the painting could be related to Ancher's own religious upbringing. Her portrayal of the female nude is unique for the time, given that this woman is not overtly sexualized and created solely as an object for the male gaze, as was typical among contemporary paintings of female nudes. Scholar Alice R. Price asserts that this painting is a reflection of Ancher's position as a woman of faith living in the traditional bohemian lifestyle of artists, that Price interprets as indicative of an ongoing inner conflict for the artist.

Recognition

She exhibited her work at the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. She was awarded the Ingenio et Arti medal in 1913, and the Tagea Brandt Rejselegat in 1924.

Ancher was included in the 2018 exhibit, Women in Paris 1850-1900.

Residence

Anna Ancher 
Michael and Anna Ancher's house in Skagen

The Skagen residence of Anna and Michael Ancher was purchased in 1884. In 1913, a large studio annex was added to the property. This also formed part of what is on display publicly today as a museum dedicated to both Anna and Michael Ancher. Upon her death in 1964, their daughter, Helga Ancher, left the house and all of its contents to a foundation. The former residence was restored and opened as a museum and visitor attraction.

In 1967, Michael and Anna Ancher's house (Anchers Hus) in Skagen was converted into a museum by the Helga Ancher Foundation before Anchers Hus opened to the public for tours. The original furniture and paintings created by the Anchers and other Skagen artists are shown in the restored home and studio. Art exhibitions are arranged in the Saxild House (Saxilds Gaard), another building on the property. It is filled with displays of paintings by Michael and Anna Ancher, as well as by many other Skagen painters who made up their circle of friends.

Correspondance

A collection of almost 4,000 letters between Amma and Michael Ancher and their friends, with comments by the art historian Elisabeth Fabritius, was published as Anna og Mchael Ancher. Breve og fotografier 1866-1935 I-VI was published by Forlaget Historika. in 2020.

Danish thousand-kroner banknote

Anna and Michael Ancher were featured on the front side of the DKK1000 banknote, which came into circulation on 25 November 2004 and subsequently, was replaced. The front of the banknote had a double portrait of Anna and Michael Ancher, derived from two 1884 paintings by Peder Severin Krøyer, which originally hung on the walls in the dining room at Brøndums Hotel.

Paintings

Retrospective exhibitions

  • Anna Ancher – Skagens indre og ytre rom, Lillehammer Kunstmuseum, Norway, 2021
  • I Am Anna. A Homage to Anna Ancher, Skagens Museum, Denmark, 2009
  • Anna Ancher, Arken Museum of Modern Art, Copenhagen, 2011
  • Anna Ancher & Co.—The Painting Women, Ribe Kunstmuseum, Denmark, 2007
  • Anna Ancher—det besjælede rum, Ribe Kunstmuseum, Denmark, 1999
  • Anna Ancher, 1859–1935, Malerin in Skagen, Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum, Hannover, 1994–1995

See also

References

Literature

Tags:

Anna Ancher BackgroundAnna Ancher CareerAnna Ancher ResidenceAnna Ancher CorrespondanceAnna Ancher Danish thousand-kroner banknoteAnna Ancher PaintingsAnna Ancher Retrospective exhibitionsAnna Ancher LiteratureAnna AncherJyllandSkagen Painters

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Katt WilliamsSibgatullah AnsariBody Cam (film)Lewis HamiltonRoad House (1989 film)Seth MacFarlaneList of Twenty20 cricket recordsFlying Machines Which Do Not FlyNickelodeonJulius CaesarNick MohammedPhilippinesGood TimesSoviet UnionKrishnanand RaiNullBBC World ServiceLand of BadSt Nazaire RaidMariah CareyDebbie ReynoldsDwayne JohnsonEkaterina AlexandrovaThunderbolts (film)Matt SchlappSolo LevelingGoat DaysAndrew TateThe Rookie (TV series)Godzilla (franchise)4B (movement)ShyneLindsay LohanTwitch (service)Amar Singh ChamkilaPassoverGeorges St-PierreAndrew HubermanPakistanList of countries by GDP (nominal)Natasha RichardsonDamsel (2024 film)Robert F. Kennedy Jr.Harold RamisFormula OneTitanicEva MendesList of constituencies of the Lok SabhaChang and Eng Bunker2024 Indian general election in West BengalTartanLockheed Martin F-35 Lightning IIMalaysia Airlines Flight 370WeWorkApples Never FallOne Day (TV series)List of ethnic slursSeven Churches VisitationEdward VIIDaniela MelchiorSaudi ArabiaBreaking BadKim KardashianBohemian GroveFrank SinatraLisa LillienTillu SquareStephen CurryCarroll ShelbyElena RybakinaGearbox SoftwareGeorgia (country)Brittany SnowThe Gentlemen (2024 TV series)Caroline EllisonPablo EscobarPelican eelFord v FerrariLamine Yamal🡆 More