Wiwen Nilsson
Wiwen Nilsson (19 May,1897 in Copenhagen, Denmark - 8 January, 1974 in Lund, Sweden) was a Swedish silversmith and artist, a pioneer who was committed to traditional techniques, and crafted timeless and sculptural works ranging from silverware and jewellery to sculptures, reliefs and religious works. He drew inspiration from Medieval philosophy and Romanesque and Byzantine architecture, as well as Cubist influences. Striving for timeless forms, using balance, tension and dynamism to create a strong and vibrant rhythm in his works, he created distinctive and timeless designs.
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Early life and education (1897-1925)
[edit]In 1897, shortly after Wiwen Nilsson’s birth in Copenhagen, Denmark, the family returned to Lund, Sweden. In Lund, his father Anders Nilsson took over the workshop of Johan Petter Hasselgren, for whom he had earlier been an apprentice. In 1908, Anders Nilsson was appointed Royal Court Jeweler to the Swedish Royal Court.
As a schoolboy, Wiwen Nilsson was already preoccupied with physical space, with proportions and dimensions and he began working in his father’s workshop at the age of 14. In 1913, Wiwen Nilsson moved to Hanau, Germany, to study drawing, engraving, and hammering techniques at the Königliche Zeichenakademie (The Royal Drawing Academy). Following the outbreak of World War I, he returned to Sweden and worked for his father. However, during the first quarter of 1917, he was able to continue his studies abroad, this time at Det Tekniske Selskabs Skole (The Technical Society's School) in Copenhagen, Denmark. From 1920–1921, he returned to Hanau to continue his studies at the Königliche Zeichenakademie. In 1922, Wiwen Nilsson travelled back to Sweden to work in his father’s workshop where he became its artistic designer, undertaking his first public assignments.
In May 1924, Wiwen Nilsson enrolled at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris, France, where he explored life drawing and anatomy. During his time in Paris, he learned the technical foundations for modelling in the atelier of the sculptor Arvid Källström, and chiseled at the atelier of the silversmith Georg Jensen. Wiwen Nilsson also devoted considerable time to self-motivated study at museums and libraries, including Le Louvre and Musée de Cluny.
In Paris, he befriended a group of fellow Swedish artists including Arvid Källström, Erik Olson and Gösta Adrian-Nilsson, known as GAN. Some of Wiwen Nilsson’s friends in Paris, including Erik Olson, were students at Fernand Léger's art school the Académie Moderne. Some artists also lived in the building where the school was located, including Isaac Grünewald, Arvid Källström, GAN, and for a period of time, Wiwen Nilsson himself.
Career
[edit]Wiwen Nilsson made his professional debut in 1923 at Jubileumsutställningen i Göteborg (The Gothenburg Tercentennial Jubilee Exposition), Sweden, exhibiting designs created for his father’s company, A. Nilsson. His works received harsh criticism. One critic, describing Wiwen Nilsson’s works, wrote: “as thin and fragile as glass, a typical case of poor sense of materials”. Another wrote that his works were “frankly ugly” with a third noting that his pieces were composed of “meaningless cone shapes”.
However, international recognition would soon follow; at the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes (International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts) in Paris, Wiwen Nilsson was awarded a Médaille d'Or (Gold Medal) for arts and crafts. Gregor Paulsson, the president of the Swedish Society of Crafts and Design and a respected art historian, curated the fair, and would become an important figure for Wiwen Nilsson and his recognition in Sweden as well as internationally. Following his success in Paris, Wiwen Nilsson was invited to exhibit in New York at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1926, and from 1926–1928 his works were exhibited at several other important institutions in the USA, including The Minneapolis Institute of Art and The Art Institute of Chicago. During this time his pieces received great acclaim among art critics. With these exhibitions, his international recognition was established, and in the years and decades that followed, his works would be continuously exhibited on the international stage.
Wiwen Nilsson and his work continued to divide opinion in Sweden, but not at the expense of praise and recognition. In 1927, he assumed ownership of his father’s company, which gave him full creative freedom, and in 1928 he was appointed Royal Court Jeweler to the Swedish Royal Court.
It was in 1930 that Wiwen Nilsson’s work became truly lauded in Sweden. At Stockholmsutställningen (The Stockholm Exhibition), his designs garnered critical acclaim, with critics hailing his “spartan disdain” for ornamentation, celebrating the precision of his craftsmanship, and suggesting that Wiwen Nilsson had “driven simplicity to its peak but also to the height of refinement”. It was at this exhibition that Wiwen Nilsson introduced a new cutlery design and groundbreaking new jewellery design where he featured what would become one of his trademark materials – large rock crystals. Here, he also introduced the cross in his jewellery designs, which up until this point had served as a manifestation of Christian faith in Sweden. His jewellery collections were subsequently exhibited internationally, including at the Dorland House in London, UK in 1931, the Venice Biennale in Italy in 1934, the Paris World Exhibition in France in 1937, and the New York World's Fair in the USA in 1939.
In the 1940s, Wiwen Nilsson’s work was exhibited at the Orrefors Galleries in Manhattan, New York, following his celebrated participation at the New York World’s Fair in 1939. It was during this decade that Wiwen Nilsson received broad recognition. In a midtown gallery, his jewellery was on display alongside Orrefors glassware and sculptures by Carl Milles.
The 1950s, began auspiciously for Wiwen Nilsson, receiving the Medaglia d’Oro (The Gold Medal) at the IX Triennale di Milano, Milan, Italy in 1951. He would return three years later for the X Triennale di Milano. During the 50s and 60s, he participated in exhibitions across Europe, the UK and North America. He received important recognition and awards in Sweden including the Gregor Paulsson Prize, the Swedish State’s Artist Award and the Prince Eugen Medal for artistic merit, conferred by the King of Sweden.
During this time, he developed many innovative designs and works including brooches, reliefs and sculptures based on his drawings from the 1920s in Hanau and Paris. He designed a complex new method for setting gemstones in jewellery, with a specially designed bezel that positioned the stone high above the band, making it appear to hover above the wearer’s finger. In his religious works, Wiwen Nilsson showcased his ability to combine academic rigour and respect for tradition with his artistic vision and commitment to functionality. For example, he referenced biblical texts to design a Communion vessel that sought to improve the aesthetics and hygiene of the service. Wiwen Nilsson’s impact on the Swedish arts and crafts movement was solidified at the 1956 exhibition at Liljevalchs Konsthall (Liljevalchs Art Gallery) in Stockholm, Sweden, staged by the Craftsmen’s Guild in celebration of its 50th anniversary. The ten selected exhibitors were each given an honorary room, and recognised as the artists who had “laid the foundation for Sweden’s modern Arts and Crafts and Art industry”. Wiwen Nilsson was the youngest member of the collective.
In connection with King Gustaf VI Adolf’s eightieth birthday in 1962, the Swedish Prime Minister Tage Erlander presented the King with a “Gift from the Nation”, delivered in a casket made by Wiwen Nilsson.
During Wiwen Nilsson’s later years, two important retrospective exhibitions were organised to honour his influential career: one at Kulturen in Lund in 1967 around the time of his seventieth birthday; the other at Malmö Museum in 1973.
Legacy
[edit]Described by Gregor Paulsson as “a learned man, philosophically as well as theologically”, Wiwen Nilsson was renowned for his academic rigour. “There are three figures I hold before all others,” he said in a 1971 interview, “Christ Pantocrator, Meister Eckhart and Dostoevskij”.
GAN in his depiction of Wiwen Nilsson expressed “He is an arts and craftsman – but theoretically he is an artist in his entire conception of life and of art …”. Wiwen Nilsson's artistic philosophy was influenced by Medieval philosophy and Byzantine and Romanesque architecture and the ideas of creating balance, tension and dynamism through correct proportions. “The only artistic effect I strive for is to vitalise the rhythmic relationships in the proportion”, he said. Wiwen Nilsson applied this consistent artistic language to all mediums, including creations to be used in a religious context. “First and foremost I want to bring out a strong and vibrant rhythm in the body (the structure) itself”, he declared. Wiwen Nilsson’s designs are prodigious in their simplicity: he advocated for silver and gold objects to retain their intrinsic qualities rather than being excessively adorned, even when the prevailing trend was to embellish. “Silver and the flat surface have their own beauty and style, their own way of expression,” he said. “It is just a matter of finding the right means of expression.”
While Wiwen Nilsson’s most notable achievement to many is the creation of the Colombian mahogany altar cross with gilded silver reliefs in the Lund Cathedral in Sweden, he is widely known for his silverware and jewellery. His work can be found in collections all over the world including British Museum, UK, Victoria and Albert Museum, UK, Nationalmuseum, Sweden, Nordiska museet, Sweden, Prins Eugens Waldemarsudde, Sweden, Nasjonalmuseet, Norway, Designmuseum Danmark, Denmark and Minneapolis Institute of Art, USA.
References
[edit]- wiwennilsson.org
- Wiwen Nilsson Estate
- Wiwen Nilsson, Flavia Frigeri
- Silversmeden, Kersti Holmquist
- ^ Sveriges dödbok 1947-2006, (Cd-rom), Sveriges Släktforskarförbund
- a b c Holmquist, K., Silversmeden Wiwen Nilsson, Kulturen Lund: 1990.
External links
[edit]Media related to Wiwen Nilsson at Wikimedia Commons
- wiwennilsson.org