| Asger Jorn |
Website Links For Asger |
Information AboutAsger Jorn |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT ASGER JORN | |
| 1914 births | |
| jorn, asger | |
| 1973 deaths | |
| danish painters | |
| modern painters | |
| situationists | |
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Upbringing He was the second oldest of six children, an elder brother to Jørgen Nash . Both his parents were teachers. His father, Lars Peter Jørgenson, was a Fundamentalist Christian who died when he was 12 years old in a car crash. His mother, Maria, ''née'' Neilsen, was more liberal but nevertheless a deeply committed Christian. This early heavy organised Christian influence had a negative effect on Asger who began progressively to inwardly rebel against it, and more generally against other forms of authority. In 1929, aged 15, he was diagnosed with Tuberculosis although he made a recovery from it after spending 3 months on the west coast of Jutland. By the age of 16 he was influenced by Nicolai Grundtvig , and although he had already started to paint, Asger enrolled in the Vinthers Seminarium, a teacher training college in Silkeborg where he paid particular attention to a course in Nineteenth Century Scandinavia n thought. Also at about this time Jorn became the subject of a number of oil paintings by the painter Martin Kaalund-Jørgensen , which encouraged Jorn to try his hand in this medium. Early career When he graduated from college in 1935 , the principal wrote a reference for him which said that he had attained 'an extraordinary rich personal development and maturity' - especially because of his wide reading in areas outside the topics required for his studies. While at College he joined the small Silkeborg branch of the Danish Communist Party and came under the direct influence of the trade unionist Christian Christensen , with whom he became close friends and who, Jorn was to later write, was to become a second father to him. In 1936 he travelled (on a BSA motorbike he had scraped together enough money to buy) to Paris to join Fernand Léger's Académie Contemporaine ; it was during this period that he turned away from figurative painting and turned to abstract art, returning again to Denmark in the summer of 1937. He again travelled to Paris in the summer of 1938, before returning to Denmark, travelling to Løkken , Silkeborg and Copenhagen . During the period of 1937 - 1942, he also studied at the Art Academy in Copenhagen. Jorn during World War II The occupation of Denmark by Nazi Germany was not unnaturally a time of deep crisis for the artist Jorn, who had been deeply inculcated with pacifism, initially sinking him into deep depression. He subsequently became an active Communist Resistant . During the war he also participated in the underground art group, the Høst , and was a contributor to its magazine Helhesten . Post war After the occupation was over, he complained that opportunities for critical thinking within the context of the communist arena had been curtailed by what he characterised as a centralised bourgeois political control. Finding this unacceptable, he broke with the Danish Communist Party, while nevertheless remaining a lifelong philosophical communist. He travelled again to France where he was a founder member of COBRA , and edited monographs of the Bibliotheque Cobra. He returned, impoverished, to Silkeborg in 1951 and resumed work in the ceramics field in 1953 . The following year he travelled to Albisola in Italy where he became involved with an offshoot of COBRA, the International Movement For An Imaginist Bauhaus . He was a prime mover of the merger of the COBRA with the Lettriste Internationale and London Psychogeographical Association to form the Situationist International (SI). Here he applied his scientific and mathematical knowledge drawn from Henri Poincaré and Niels Bohr to develop his Situlogical technique. In 1961 he left the SI, largely as a consequence of the fact that he was becoming a well-known artist which did not sit well with the SI, although his own departure was voluntary (which in itself was unusual for the SI, as it was prone to frequent purges and expulsions of members). He went on to found the Scandinavian Institute Of Comparative Vandalism . Later, he donated a museum for modern art to the Danish town of Silkeborg , near where he grew up. His philosophical system Triolectics was given a practical manifestation through the development of Three Sided Football . Later years His first American solo exhibition was at the Lefebre Gallery in 1962. After 1966, Jorn concentrated on oil painting, and travelled extensively, to Cuba, England, the United States and the far east. During the course of his artistic career he produced over 2500 paintings, prints and drawings. He died in Aarhus , Denmark on May 1 , 1973 . Essays by Asger Jorn
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