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May 3, 2017

Works by Louisa Matthíasdóttir on display at Reykjavík Art Museum, Kjarvalsstaðir

A retrospective of the works of Louisa Matthíasdóttir  Calm  was opened at Reykjavík Art Museum – Kjarvalsstaðir last weekend.

A retrospective of the works of Louisa Matthíasdóttir  Calm  was opened at Reykjavík Art Museum – Kjarvalsstaðir last weekend.
 
The artist Louisa Matthíasdóttir was born in Reykjavík in 1917. At seventeen years of age she moved to Copenhagen, where she studied art for three years, and shortly thereafter she moved to Paris for further studies. She returned to Iceland shortly before the war in 1939. Three years later she moved to New York to study art and there she met her American husband-to-be, painter Leland Bell. This year is the centennial of her birth, but she died in 2000, in USA where she lived for most of her life.
 
The exhibition in the western hall of Kjarvalsstaðir is a welcome opportunity to gain an overview over the career of a female artist who has portrayed Icelandic landscape in a unique manner. There are also many paintings of urban life in Reykjavík, still life images, self-portraits and paintings of members of Louisa´s family. Curator is Jón Proppé.
 
In a sense, Louisa was a kind of a hidden figure in Icelandic art until her works were exhibited at the autumn exhibition of the Association of Icelandic Visual Artists in 1974 when she was well into her forties. By then, Louisa was a fully developed artist and at the height of her career in USA, had held numerous exhibitions and had a contract with a well-known gallery in New York. Icelandic art lovers and critics welcomed Louisa and praised her work and when she held her first solo exhibition in Iceland, in Gallerí Borg in autumn 1987, critic Ólafur Gíslason wrote in Þjóðviljinn that if Louisa´s best landscapes don´t touch your heart, you must be blind.
 
More information: artmuseum.is

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