Artist Search
   
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z 

 Sigvald Asbjornsen  (1867 - 1954)

Research : Sigvald Asbjornsen
 

Summary

Examples of his work  
 

Quick facts

Exhibits - current  
 

Biography*

Museums

 
 

Book references

Magazine references pre-2007  
 

Discussion board

Signature Examples  
 
Marketplace : Sigvald Asbjornsen
  For sale ads Auction results*  
  Wanted ads Auctions upcoming for him*  
  Dealers Auction sales graphs*  
 

What's my art worth?

Magazine ads pre-1998*  
 

Market Alert - Free

 
Lived/Active: Illinois/Michigan      Known for: portrait sculpture, pastel landscape
Back to Previous Page

Login for full access
 
View AskART Services










*may require subscription

Available for Sigvald Asbjornsen:

Quick facts (Styles, locations, mediums, teachers, subjects, geography, etc.) (Sigvald Asbjornsen)

yes

Biographical information (Sigvald Asbjornsen)

yes

Book references (Sigvald Asbjornsen)

7

Museum references (Sigvald Asbjornsen)

2

Discussion board entries (Sigvald Asbjornsen)

0

Please send me Alert Updates for Sigvald Asbjornsen (free)
What is an alert list?

Ad Code: 4
Sigvald Asbjornsen
An example of work by Sigvald Asbjornsen
Artwork images are copyright of the artist or assignee
Biography from Fine Arts Collection, Luther College:
Sigvald Asbjørnsen was born in Christiania (Oslo), Norway, October 19, 1867. He studied art with B. Bergslieu, Mathias Skeibrok and Middelthun in Norway. At the age of 16 he was awarded a stipend from King Oscar II to study at the Royal Academy in Oslo where he worked for five years. He emigrated to the United States in 1892, first working in Michigan where he received several important commissions for sculpture. He eventually moved to Chicago where he worked on the buildings for the World Columbian Exposition of 1893.

The remainder of his professional career was spent in Chicago where he sculpted a number of public works which were sent to various localities in the United States. He received the St. Olaf medal in 1952 from Norway’s King Haakon VII. Asbjørnsen was married to Margaretha Stuhr, also from Norway, and they were the parents of three children. In the later years of his life, Asbjørnsen turned to painting pastel winter and summer landscapes. He died in 1954.

Asbjørnsen was primarily known as a sculptor. Some of his well-known commissions include the Leif Erikson statue in Humboldt Park (1901), Chicago; Louis Joliet for the Public Library in Joliet, IL; and, War and Soldiers’ Statue for the Sherman Monument, Washington, D.C. (1903). American statesmen he sculpted were the John R. Monaghan Monument, Spokane, WA; Wilber Fisk Sanders Statue, Helene, MT; and, the Hon. Robert William Moore Statue, Memphis, TN. He also crafted the following busts in bronze: Benjamin Franklin, Theodore Roosevelt, Edwin Westgaard, and John Anderson. He made medallions of Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Ibsen, Grieg, and others. His sculptured relief bust of Roald Amundsen faces the Pacific Ocean in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA.

Asbjørnsen exhibited sculptures at the Art Institute of Chicago between 1897 and 1921. His sculptural work was also shown at the University of Minnesota exhibit, “The Divided Heart: Scandinavian Immigrant Artists, 1850-1950” in 1982.

Works by Asbjørnsen in Decorah include several sculptures owned by the Norwegian-American Museum. The plaques of Norwegian pioneer minister Ulrik Koren and his wife, Elisabeth Koren stand in the Washington Prairie Lutheran Church cemetery in rural Decorah.

The work by Asbjørnsen in the Fine Arts Collection is a bronze bust of Osul Torrison, of Manitowoc, WI, an early member of the Luther College Board of Trustees (1875-1884). Torrison’s eight sons attended Luther College. The bust was donated by the Torrison family in 1930. The bust has been placed on the Inventory of American Sculpture, National Museum of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution and the Catalogue of American Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.

Ref: Strand, A.E. A History of the Norwegians in Illinois. Chicago, IL: John Anderson Publishing Co., 1905; Sundby-Hansen, Harry. Norwegian Immigrant Contributions to America’s Making. New York, NY: International Press, 1921; Heitmann, Helen M. in From Fjord to Prairie: Norwegian-Americans in the Midwest, 1825-1975. Chicago, IL: Norwegian-American Immigration Anniversary Commission, 1976.


Written and submitted by Jane Kemp
Professor; Circulation-Special Collections Librarian
Supervisor, Fine Arts Collection (http://finearts.luther.edu)
Luther College
Decorah, IA 52101

** If you discover credit omissions or have additional information to add, please let us know at registrar@AskART.com.
  go to top home | site map | site terms | AskART services & subscriptions | contact | about us
  copyright © 2000-2012 AskART all rights reserved ® AskART and Artists' Bluebook are registered trademarks

  A |  B |  C |  D-E |  F-G |  H |  I-K |  L |  M |  N-P |  Q-R |  S |  T-V |  W-Z  
  frequently searched artists 1, 2, more...  
  art appraisals, art for sale, auction records, misc artists