Albinus Hasselgren | |
Birth Name: | Johan Albin Hasselgren |
Birth Date: | 20 March 1880 |
Birth Place: | Gävle, Sweden |
Death Place: | Westfield, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Resting Place: | Swedish Cemetery, Worcester |
Nationality: | Swedish-American |
Notable Works: | Vinland the year 1117 |
Albinus Hasselgren (born Johan Albin Hasselgren, March 20, 1880 – April 9, 1916) was a Swedish-American artist.
Hasselgren was born in Gävle, Sweden. He was the son of Per Johan Hasselgren and Anna Gustafva Jansson. His sister was Swedish artist Elfrida Gustava Ewerlöf (1886-1984).[1]
In 1903, Hasselgren immigrated to the United States where he adopted the first name to Albinus. He painted rural scenes of New England and a number of religious works. Hasselgren also painted altar pieces for Lutheran churches in New England. Two are still in the church of which he became a congregation member, the Emanuel Lutheran.
Soon after his arrival in New England, he became involved in the discussion about early Norse settlements in North America. Hasselgren became convinced that the Newport Tower in Newport, Rhode Island was a remain from such a settlement, something that he developed in his most famous painting Vinland the year 1127. In the painting, we see Vikings together with Native Americans in front of the tower. The painting was featured in the Sunday Telegram and was published in the magazine Prärieblomman Kalender för 1912 .
Hasselgren lived his last four years at a sanatorium in Westfield, Massachusetts, after being diagnosed with tuberculosis. Hasselgren died during 1916 at age 36. He was buried on April 11, 1916, in the Swedish Cemetery (now All Faiths Cemetery) in Worcester (Lot #1359).[2]