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Special Sale: Monday 5 March at 6 pm in Uppsala

Eric Johansson – the forgotten expressionist

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Unknown in Sweden but recognized as a foremost expressionist beyond the borders. Eric Johansson was born in the German Dresden in the year of 1896 and became the only Swedish artist whose works were classified as “degenerated art” by the Nazis. Uppsala Auktionskammare will in our forthcoming auction present more than 50 early works by the artist Eric Johansson, most of them from the time he spent in Dresden. They are works created by a fascinating life story, about an artist who until recently was never mentioned in the Swedish art history literature.

Even though his name sounds very Swedish, Eric Johansson grew up with German foster parents and his native language was therefore German. Dresden was an important and thriving cultural city in Europe at the beginning of the 20th century, frequently visited by some of the greatest modernist artists and it was also the city to host two of the most prominent art galleries in Germany at that time. The German expressionist movement was founded in Dresden through “Die Brücke”, by the first generation of expressionists Erich Heckel, Emil Noldem Karl Schmidt-Rottluff and Ernst Ludwig Kirschner. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, the city developed into one of the most important German cities for the growing Nazi movement, ideas that Eric Johansson strongly disagreed with through his membership in the Communist party. Due to his marriage with a Jewish woman and his own revolutionary interests, he soon caught the Nazi party’s attention. Through his Swedish citizenship he managed to receive a certain protection but a misplaced comment about Herman Göring during a restaurant visit led to Eric Johansson being kept in prison for four months – and when he finally got released he managed to flee the war-torn Germany through Czechoslovakia and Poland to Sweden, where he spent the rest of his life.

One of the artists that often visited Dresden before the war was Oskar Kokoschka, whose paintings would hang next to Eric Johansson’s at the famous art exhibition arranged by the Nazis “Entartete Kunst” in the mid 1930’s. In the same room, the public could also view art works by masters such as Schwitters, Dix, Grosz, Kandinsky and Mondrian and Eric Johansson was therefore the only Swedish artist categorized by the Nazis as a degenerated artist. A large part of his production and art works were never found – probably burned at the Berlin Fire Department’s Farm in March 1939 together with 1003 oil paintings and 3825 watercolours, drawings and prints by artists whose operation was shut down by the Nazis.

Among the works presented in this catalogue, “Soldyrkan” (cat. no. 2040) is one of the highlights, a watercolour painted with significant inspiration from Wassily Kandinsky’s early works and executed in the 1910’s in Dresden. From the same period a number of interesting self-portraits can be seen in the auction. “Self-portrait with a pipe” (cat. no. 2012) from 1918 and the drawing “Cubist Selfportrait” (cat. no. 2001) show Eric Johansson’s versatility and skill as an artist. Expressionism as a movement can be fully viewed in cat. no. 2020, a canvas painted on both sides. “Selbstmorderin” shows the despair and frustration during the on-going war, while the other side depicts a woman painted in bold and contrasting colours.


The art works will be on view at our office at Nybrogatan 20 in Stockholm, between 1-5 March 2018.
The auction will be held 5 March at 6 pm at out head office in Uppsala.

Contact

Jeanna Ahlin

Specialist

Modern & Contemporary Art
Phone: +46 (0)734-32 41 45
ahlin@uppsalaauktion.se

Julia Unge Sörling

Specialist

Classic Art & Old Masters
Phone: +46 (0)701-08 14 08
sorling@uppsalaauktion.se