Portrait of Ida, the Artist's Wife by Vilhelm Hammershøi - 1898 - 242 x 188 мм Statens Museum for Kunst Portrait of Ida, the Artist's Wife by Vilhelm Hammershøi - 1898 - 242 x 188 мм Statens Museum for Kunst

Portrait of Ida, the Artist's Wife

pencil • 242 x 188 мм
  • Vilhelm Hammershøi - May 15, 1864 - February 13, 1916 Vilhelm Hammershøi 1898

We present today's magnificent work thanks to Statens Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen. : )

Vilhelm Hammershøi and his wife lived in various European cities at irregular intervals. For example, they lived in London from the end of October 1897 to the end of May 1898. Unlike Rome and Paris, London was not a capital of the arts at the time, and this naturally occasioned some surprise and speculation as to what made a Danish artist want to go there.

One of the reasons was, undoubtedly, the US-born painter James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834–1903). In London, Hammershøi took a step that was quite out of character. He wrote to Whistler and tried to meet him in person, but did not succeed. The main reason for this direct approach was that Hammershøi hoped for Whistler’s intervention to secure his representation at The International Society’s inaugural exhibition in 1898. Here, he wished to present Two Figures, a picture of himself and his wife, Ida, based on several studies such as this piece.

The artist did not intend his picture to contain ”portraits in the strictest sense of the word,” and indeed this drawing is something other and more than a good likeness: a rendition of veiled presence, a pencil painting with echoes of Leonardo. Another obvious source of inspiration is the museum’s portrait of a young woman with a carnation, previously attributed to Rembrandt, but now attributed to Willem Drost (1633–58). Hammershøi painted a replica of this picture ten years before.

- Jan Garff

P.S. Dive into the quiet life of Vilhelm Hammershøi interiors here.<3