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Vilhelm Hammershøi. Maler des stillen Klangs
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Edited by: Zürcher Kunstgesellschaft / Kunsthaus Zürich
Graphic Design: Studio Sonia Sánchez
Artist: Vilhelm Hammershøi
Texts by: Florian Illies, Clara Marcellán Fernández, Peter Nørgaard Larsen
German, English
June 2026,
232
Pages
Hardcover
240mm x
290mm
ISBN: 978-3-7757-6380-6
Danish painter Vilhelm Hammershøi is one of the most fascinating artists of the period around 1900. Using sparse imagery and a reduced colour palette, he created interiors that are overwhelmingly poetic in their reduction to the essentials. People rarely appear in his paintings, and when they do, they are shown from behind or absorbed in everyday activities. Hammershøi has therefore rightly been called the 'Vermeer of the North.' For the first time, the catalogue and exhibition focus on the role of sound in Hammershøi's visual world. The painter himself played the cello, and musical instruments are a recurring theme in his compositions. The subtitle 'Painter of Silent Sound' only superficially describes a paradox. For as 'silent' as the paintings may seem at first glance, it is a silence that resembles the concentrated calm immediately before the start of a concert. A silence that demands our attention and invites us to listen - thus revealing a completely new side to Hammershøi's art.
Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864-1916) is considered the most important representative of Danish Symbolism. At the time of his death, he was a painter celebrated throughout Europe; his admirers included Rainer Maria Rilke and Emil Nolde. Later, his work was increasingly forgotten outside his homeland until it was "rediscovered" throughout Europe a good hundred years later. To this day, his monochrome interiors continue to impress, with a subtle interplay of light and shadow unfolding in their meditative silence.
Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864-1916) is considered the most important representative of Danish Symbolism. At the time of his death, he was a painter celebrated throughout Europe; his admirers included Rainer Maria Rilke and Emil Nolde. Later, his work was increasingly forgotten outside his homeland until it was "rediscovered" throughout Europe a good hundred years later. To this day, his monochrome interiors continue to impress, with a subtle interplay of light and shadow unfolding in their meditative silence.
Kunsthaus Zürich
July 3 - October 25, 2026
July 3 - October 25, 2026
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