Skip to content
Nationalmuseum’s summer exhibition to showcase popular works

Press release -

Nationalmuseum’s summer exhibition to showcase popular works

Opening on 15 May, the Highlights exhibition will feature a selection of Nationalmuseum’s best-known and most popular works. Artists such as Paul Cézanne, Anders Zorn, Judith Leyster and Antoine Watteau will rub shoulders. The exhibition also considers why some works achieve greater popularity than others and parallels will be drawn between the modern-day phenomenon of selfies and older forms of portraiture.

This year’s summer exhibition, Highlights. Famous and Forgotten Art Treasures from Nationalmuseum, features a long list of key works from the museum’s collection. Alongside pieces by French artists like Paul Cézanne, Claude Monet and Berthe Morisot, the exhibits will include well-known works by Scandinavian fin de siècle artists such as Anders Zorn, Bruno Liljefors, Carl Larsson, Eva Bonnier and August Strindberg, to name but a few. There will also be classic works by earlier artists, such as the Dutch 17th-century painters Rembrandt and Judith Leyster, and 18th-century artists like Antoine Watteau, François Boucher and Anne Vallayer-Coster. In short, the exhibition will present a selection of paintings, sculpture, applied art and design from the 16th century to the present day.

As well as displaying well-known artworks, the exhibition will reflect on why some works have achieved greater popularity than others, and how our notions of art have changed over the ages. The exhibition will chart the path to stardom taken by certain paintings, but will also follow the fortunes of works that never quite made it and long-forgotten pieces that were big hits in their day.

A section of the exhibition will draw parallels between past and present, comparing older portraits with today’s “selfies” – self-portraits taken at arm’s length on a mobile phone. The comparison will reveal that the selfie is not an entirely new genre of visual art, but is firmly rooted in the western tradition of self-portraiture – and that portraits are largely about power, marketing, and positioning yourself in the social hierarchy, irrespective of which century you live in. An audiovisual presentation will play alongside the portraits, featuring the actress Ann Petrén in a discussion of stereotypes, body language, and the human need for validation.

Highlights. Famous and Forgotten Art Treasures from Nationalmuseum will be on show in Nationalmuseum’s temporary venue at Konstakademien, Fredsgatan 12, Stockholm, from 15 May until 31 August 2014.

Further information
Mikael Ahlund, exhibition curator, mikael.ahlund@nationalmuseum.se, +46 8 5195 4454
Margareta Gynning, curator portraits and selfies, margareta.gynning@nationalmuseum.se, +46  8 5195 4399
Hanna Tottmar, press officer, hanna.tottmar@nationalmuseum.se, +46 767 234632

Caption
Gustave Courbet, Jo, the Beautiful Irish Girl. Photo: Nationalmuseum


Categories


Nationalmuseum is Sweden’s premier museum of art and design. The collections comprise older paintings, sculpture, drawings and graphic art, and applied art and design up to the present day. The museum building is currently under renovation and scheduled to open again in 2017. In the meantime, the museum will continue its activities through collaborations, touring exhibitions and a temporary venue at the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts, Fredsgatan 12, Stockholm. Nationalmuseum collaborates with Svenska Dagbladet, Fältman & Malmén and Grand Hôtel Stockholm. For more information visit www.nationalmuseum.se

Contacts

Head of Press

Head of Press

Press contact Hanna Tottmar +46 (0)8 5195 4400

Welcome to Nationalmuseum Sweden!

Nationalmuseum is Sweden’s museum of art and design. The collections include paintings, sculpture, drawings and graphic art from the 16th century up to the beginning of the 20th century and the collection of applied art and design up to the present day. The total amount of objects is around 700,000. .

The emphasis of the collection of paintings is on Swedish 18th and 19th century painting. Dutch painting from the 17th century is also well represented, and the French 18th century collection is regarded as one of the best in the world. The works are made by artists such as Rembrandt, Rubens, Goya, Boucher, Watteau, Renoir and Degas as well as Swedish artists such as Anders Zorn, Carl Larsson, Ernst Josephson and Carl Fredrik Hill.

The collection of applied art and design consists of objects such as ceramics, textiles, glass and precious and non-precious metals as well as furniture and books etc. The collection of prints and drawings comprises works by Rembrandt, Watteau, Manet, Sergel, Carl Larsson, Carl Fredrik Hill and Ernst Josephson. Central are the 2,000 master drawings that Carl Gustaf Tessin acquired during his tour of duty as Sweden's ambassador to France in the 18th century.

Art and objects from Nationalmuseum’s collections can also be seen at several royal palaces such as Gripsholm, Drottningholm, Strömsholm, Rosersberg and Ulriksdal as well as in the Swedish Institute in Paris. The museum administers the Swedish National Portrait Gallery at Gripsholm Castle, the world’s oldest national portrait gallery and the Gustavsberg collection with approximately 45,000 objects manufactured at the Gustavsberg Porcelain Factory. Nationalmuseum also curates exhibitions at Nationalmuseum Jamtli and the Gustavsberg Porcelain Museum.

Nationalmuseum is a government authority with a mandate to preserve cultural heritage and promote art, interest in art and knowledge of art and that falls within the remit of the Swedish Ministry of Culture.