Svend Rasmussen Svendsen

Svend Rasmussen Svendsen (1864-1945)
"Winter Landscape"
Oil, n.d.
LFAC #64
Biography
Svend Rasmussen Svendsen was born March 21, 1864, in Nittedal,
Norway, son of Rasmus and Marie Svendsen. Shortly after his birth, his
parents moved to Oslo. He received his early schooling in Norway, although
left school at the age of twelve to work. In 1881, he emigrated to America,
settling in Chicago, IL. He married May Isabel Newton in 1890, with whom
he had five children. Svendsen was erroneously reported to have died in
1930 and short obituaries for him appeared in various publications. He
was known to have had a decline in his career due to alcoholism and other
difficulties, as one of these obituaries pointed out. He actually died
in Chicago, September 6, 1945.
Svensen is considered by some accounts to be a self-taught painter who
was known to have enjoyed visiting the National Gallery as well as Blomquists
gallery, both in Oslo, before he emigrated. He also studied with Fritz
Thaulow, a well-known city and landscape painter, in Norway and at the
Académie Delécluse in Paris in 1896 with Edward F. Ertz.
He is known especially for his rural scenes, marine views, and snow scenes
of Norway. His paintings were purchased by a number of Norwegian and American
private collectors including Joseph Jefferson, Edward B. Butler and Clarence
Darrow. Works by Svensen continue to be actively sold through contemporary
art auctions.
Svendsen exhibited frequently at the Chicago Art Institute between 1895
and 1920, showing oil and watercolor paintings as well as pastels. He
won the Young Fortnightly prize in 1895 awarded by the Chicago Art Institute.
He also received an honorable mention for one of his works at the Nashville
Exposition of 1897 and a bronze medal at the St. Louis Exposition of 1904.
He had one-man exhibitions at the W. Scott Thurber Galleries in Chicago
between 1897 and 1903. He also exhibited at the National Academy of Design
annual in 1902 and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts annual, 1898-1900
and 1902. In 1913, his name appeared on the register of the Chicago art
dealer O.R. Kellogg. He is recorded to have exhibited at the Chicago Norske
Klub in 1920. One of his paintings was shown at the Norse-American Centennial
Art Exhibition at the Minnesota State Fair in 1925. He was also included
in the exhibition, "Scandinavian Paintings in Northfield" in
1980. Two of his paintings were in the exhibit, "The Divided Heart:
Scandinavian Immigrant Artists, 1850-1950," shown at the University
of Minnesota in 1982. Works by Svendsen were also shown at the "Norway
in America" exhibition in Norway in 1989 and in the exhibit, "The
Friedman Collection: Artists of Chicago," in spring 2002 held at
the Spanierman Gallery in Chicago.
The painting by Svensen in the Fine Arts Collection is an oil on canvas
entitled, "Winter Landscape," which is undated. It was donated
to Luther College in 1941 by the family of Nils Remmen. It has been added
to the Inventory of American Paintings maintained by the National Museum
of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution.
Ref: Strand, A.E. A History of the Norwegians of Illinois. Chicago,
IL: John Anderson Publishing Co., 1905; Norway in America. Decorah,
IA: Vesterheim, 1989; Gerdts,
William H. The Friedman Collection: Artists of Chicago. New York,
NY: Spanierman Gallery, 2002; http://www.illinoisart.org/biographies/Svendsen.htm
Updated
01/16/2009
|