Monday, September 26, 2022

Artist of the Day, September 26, 2022: L. A. Ring, a Danish painter (#1657)

Laurits Andersen Ring (1854 –1933) was one of the foremost Danish painters of the turn of the 20th century, who pioneered both symbolism and social realism in Denmark. Considered one of the masterpieces of Danish culture, his painting Summer Day by Roskilde Fjord was included in the 2006 Danish Culture Canon.

L.A. Ring has been a key figure in the international breakthrough of Nordic art. His works are represented in major shows dedicated to art from around 1900, but despite his importance this will be the first exhibition devoted solely to Ring’s art shown outside the Nordic countries. It’s a rare opportunity to meet a highly gifted Nordic artist with a view on nature and modern life that corresponds with American Naturalism and Impressionism.

Rings paintings testify to the radical artistic and cultural shifts that took place in the decades around 1900, more so than the works of many other artists from the period. Meeting the modern world head on, Ring is the one Danish artist to best describe the great changes in the world of art and in society taking place in the decades around the year 1900. The upheaval can be seen everywhere. Often as a restless search for something different and perhaps more meaningful.

In Ring’s works, man often occupies a transitory zone—a threshold—whether at a garden gate, a window, a railway crossing, or on a road. It may be a young girl who is entering adulthood, or an old one who is close to death. Painted on the threshold of modern life, Ring’s works contain “the new” as concrete objects, as motifs, but they also reflect “the modern” as a state of mind. Eminently relatable, his art has a universally human quality. Showing everyday life around 1900, it resonates with American history as it also tells the story of many European emigrants who settled in the U.S. around 1900.

“In American emigrant culture, one finds a relationship with nature and place that is so pronounced and significant in L.A. Ring’s paintings. Feeling a lifelong connection with a personal, primordial, yet-abandoned ur-landscape is also, and for good reason, a recurring theme among several American artists during the first half of the 20th century. With its depictions of vast landscapes and modern urban life in an America undergoing major transformations, American realism and naturalism has strong parallels to Ring’s production,” explains Peter Nørgaard Larsen, Senior Researcher and Chief Curator at SMK, the National Gallery of Denmark.

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L. A. Ring
View from Sankt Jørgensbjerg in Roskilde
with an old man looking out the window, 1926
Looks over Roskilde, 1925
Waiting for the train, Level Crossing by Roskilde Highway, 1914
The ruines at Roskilde Landevej, 1912
Mrs Sigrid Ring sitting on a stone baluster, 1912
The fjord at Karrebæksminde, 1910
Sædemanden, 1910
Winter. Sunshine, 1908
Interior with Girl Reading, 1908
At the cemetery in Fløng, 1904
Fenced-in Pastures by a Farm with a Stork’s Nest on the Roof, 1903
The sick man, 1902
Misty winter day in Vinderød, 1901
The river and the harbour at Frederiksværk, 1900
The Month of June, 1899
Now the Day is ending, and the Night is pouring out, 1899
Lundbye's bench by Arresø, 1899
Road at Vinderød, 1898
At Breakfast, 1898
In the Garden Doorway, The Artist's Wife, 1897
Kähler's building behind the Bank in Næstved, 1895
Elletrunter, 1893
Brickyard workers. Ladby brickworks, 1892
Raager på Pløjemarken, 1891
An old woman with a basket on a road, 1891
Landscape with Mogenstrup Mill, 1889
 Road near Maagenstrup, 1888
Skeleton. Death without wings, 1887
Gleaners, 1887
Evening. The old wife and death, 1887
The goose guards in the village of Ring, 1886
People for Einem Haus, 1885
Harvest, 1885
A Visit to the Shoemaker’s Shop, 1885
The Railroad guard, 1884
An old woman sitting at the window, 1881

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