An Introduction to Five Great Scandinavian Artists

Museum Guide

By Google Arts & Culture

The Scream (1910) by Edvard MunchThe Munch Museum, Oslo

From the scream to the silence: these are five of the most important artists in the Scandinavian canon

The stunning dramatic landscapes, long summer nights and freezing winters inspired these Nordic artists to produce some of the finest works of Modern art. Here are five paintings you should know:

The Scream- Edvard Munch
The Scream is undoubtedly one of the most famous images in the history of art — so much so that it has become a part of pop culture — but what is it actually about? Munch suffered greatly from anxiety and depression, and he described this painting as a depiction of a moment of sheer panic he once experienced when looking at a dramatic blood-red sunset over the Kristiania fjord — which would also form the backdrop of another of his best paintings, Anxiety. As in Van Gogh’s The Starry Night, the intensity and swirling instability of the the natural landscape is a manifestation of the artist’s inner turmoil. In a broader context though, the painting is also indicative of the broader sense of public anxiety experienced in an increasingly secular, commercial and unstable modern world.

The Scream Edvard Munch 1910 (From the collection of the Munch Museum) 

Summer Evening at Skagen Beach. The Painter and his Wife- Peder Krøyer
Peder Krøyer was one of the most prominent Skagen painters—a community of artists who congregated every summer in this fishing village in northern Denmark in the 1870-80s and painted the landscape and local inhabitants. The beach at Skagen recurs frequently as the setting of Krøyer’s art, with this painting of the artist on a stroll with his wife and dog, perhaps the most famous. Here we’re presented with an idyllic, perfectly tranquil evening scene; Krøyer and his wife Marie seem to have stopped in their tracks to drink in the beauty of their surroundings, while the soft moonlight reflected in the sea gives the picture an ethereal glow.

Summer evening on the beach at Skagen. The painter and his wife. (1899) by Peder Severin KrøyerThe Hirschsprung Collection

Summer Evening at Skagen Beach. The Painter and his Wife Peder Krøyer 1889 (From the collection of the Hirschsprung Collection)

Summer Evening is just one of several paintings by Krøyer on display at the Hirschsprung Collection. Check out the rest of them on Museum View below.

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Museum View of Summer Evening at Skagen Beach. The Painter and his Wife Peder Krøyer 1889 (From the collection of the Hirschsprung Collection)

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Stetind in Fog- Peder Balke
There’s also an otherworldliness in the work of 19th century Norwegian landscape artist Peder Balke who seems to have been equally influenced by European Romanticism and eastern minimalistic ink drawings such as those by Japanese master Sesshū. Here the Stetind mountain seems almost to float above the horizon, its upper reaches suddenly emerging from the thick fog to pierce the clouds above. Balke gives us an idea of the immense scale of the mountain by including details in the foreground — a boat, rocky hills and people— which are completely dwarfed by the looming Stetind, and the use of whites and greys evokes the treacherous iciness.

Stetind in Fog (1864) by Peder BalkeThe National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Norway

Stetind in Fog Peder Balker 1864 (From the collection of the National Museum for Art, Architecture and Design, Norway)

Stetind in Fog hangs alongside other dramatic landscapes by Balke and his Nordic contemporaries. Check them out in Museum View below:

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Museum View of Stetind in Fog Peder Balker 1864 (From the collection of the National Museum for Art, Architecture and Design, Norway)

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Interior with Artist’s Easel- Vilhelm Hammershøi
While Munch is known for painting earth-shaking screams, the Danish artist Vilhelm Hammershøi made a name for himself by painting silent, interior settings. Inspired by the domestic paintings of Johannes Vermeer, Hammershøi’s works are recognized by their stillness, lack of narrative, and, often, as in this instance, human subject. We frequently get the sense with his work that we’re voyeurs observing private rooms and moments through open doors and windows. The muted color palette of grey and whites, the lifelessness and blurriness of Hammershøi’s brushwork combine to give his paintings an atmospheric, ghostly air.

Interior with the Artist's Easel (1910) by Vilhelm HammershøiSMK - Statens Museum for Kunst

Interior with the Artist's Easel Vilhelm Hammershøi 1910 (From the collection of the Statens Museum for Kunst) 

Friends- Hanna Hirsch Pauli
Hanna Hirsch Pauli was a student at the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts in Stockholm which was at the time one of very few institutions which gave access to formal training to upcoming female artists. She became known predominantly for portraits such as this one which depicts a gathering of the artist’s friends — a who’s who of cultural elites including her husband, the artist Georg Pauli, the actress Olga Björkegren, the author Klas Fåhreus and the controversial philosopher Ellen Key who is reading to the group. The warm lamp light and proximity of the subjects to one another suggests a cosiness and makes us almost wish we were part of this tight-knit gang.

Friends (1900/1907) by Hanna PauliNationalmuseum Sweden

Friends Hanna Hirsch Pauli 1900-7 (From the collection of the Nationalmuseum Sweden)

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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