"The Skagen painters
At the end of the 19th century, Skagen became the centre of one of the most famous artists’ colonies in Europe, known as the Skagen painters. In the beginning it was generally the very young, less established artists who journeyed to the tip of Jutland peninsula in Denmark. The first artists who came to the town at the beginning of the 1870s had met at the Royal Academy of Art in Copenhagen and recommended the town to one another. In Skagen, there was an abundance of plein air motifs, the town had a local population who were usually willing to model for a modest fee, and social and professional fellowship was also a major factor for many artists.
The artists’ colony in Skagen was part of an international phenomenon. Artists came to Skagen from other countries and there were artists’ colonies in several other places in Europe, Russia, North America and Australia at the time. The artists’ colony in Skagen was also visited by authors, composers, musicians, singers, craftspeople, and actors, several of whom were among the most prominent cultural personalities of the era in Denmark and Scandinavia." Daqui
Artists’ luncheon at Brøndum’s Hotel
P. S. Krøyer
1883
"The painting is a central work in Brøndum’s dining room today, and is considered to be one of P.S. Krøyer’s masterpieces. In the picture are some of the Norwegian and Swedish artists that were a part of the colony in 1883, with Michael Ancher in the background, and hotel proprietor, Degn Brøndum sitting at the table but without Krøyer himself in the picture. Krøyer has depicted the artists in one of the situations that they have described in their own anecdotes: Conversations around the table. There were no official rules for the members of the artist colony and artists were not gathered because they were a part of an artist association or group of artists, but because they chose to be a part of an informal community. The picture was probably painted in the room that was lined in 1884 with stained wood panels and has subsequently become known as Brøndum’s dining room." Daqui
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