Lot Essay
Né à Copenhague, Wilhelm Freddie est considéré comme l'un des plus grands artistes scandinaves du début de l'ère moderne. Il est notamment célèbre pour la controverse qu'il suscite dès ses premiers pas dans le surréalisme. En 1930, au cours de l'une de ses expositions, les visiteurs furent tellement choqués par ses motifs caractéristiques de corps déformés et asservis qu'ils choisirent de retourner de nombreuses œuvres face aux murs. Malgré sa détermination à exposer ses toiles aux côtés des œuvres exécutées par les artistes surréalistes les plus reconnus à l'international à l'instar de Dalí, Tanguy ou de Giacometti, le scandale poursuivit Freddie tout au long de sa carrière. En 1936, redoutant l'indignation du public, les autorités britanniques lui interdirent d'exposer l’une de ses œuvres à l'Exposition internationale du Surréalisme de Londres. Au cours de ses presque quarante ans de carrière, sa réputation de renégat fit peu à peu place à une forme d'acceptation et, enfin, d'admiration pour l'originalité sans concession de son imagerie et pour sa volonté de lever le voile sur la répression et l'hypocrisie de la société et de la culture contemporaines.
The Copenhagen-born artist Wilhelm Freddie, considered one of the foremost Scandinavian artists of the early modern era, is renowned for the controversy he attracted from his very first forays into the surrealist genre. During an exhibition of his work in 1930 visitors were so shocked by his characteristic motifs of distorted and subjugated bodies, that they turned many works to face the wall. Despite a determination to show his paintings alongside those of the international surrealist heavyweights such as Dali, Tanguy or Giacometti, scandal would pursue Freddie throughout his career. In 1936 fear of public outrage led the British authorities to prevent a painting of his being shown at the International Surrealist Exhibition in London. Over the course of the artist’s near forty year career, his reputation as a renegade would gradually transform into a form of acceptance and eventually admiration for the uncompromising originality of his imagery and his pursuit to unveil the repressions and hypocrisy of contemporary society and culture.
The Copenhagen-born artist Wilhelm Freddie, considered one of the foremost Scandinavian artists of the early modern era, is renowned for the controversy he attracted from his very first forays into the surrealist genre. During an exhibition of his work in 1930 visitors were so shocked by his characteristic motifs of distorted and subjugated bodies, that they turned many works to face the wall. Despite a determination to show his paintings alongside those of the international surrealist heavyweights such as Dali, Tanguy or Giacometti, scandal would pursue Freddie throughout his career. In 1936 fear of public outrage led the British authorities to prevent a painting of his being shown at the International Surrealist Exhibition in London. Over the course of the artist’s near forty year career, his reputation as a renegade would gradually transform into a form of acceptance and eventually admiration for the uncompromising originality of his imagery and his pursuit to unveil the repressions and hypocrisy of contemporary society and culture.