Fanny Hjelm | |
Birth Name: | Fanny Elisabeth Wilhelmina Hjelm |
Birth Date: | 6 November 1858 |
Birth Place: | Lindesberg, Sweden |
Death Date: | 6 October 1944 |
Nationality: | Swedish |
Known For: | Painter, portraitist, miniaturist |
Fanny Elisabeth Wilhelmina Hjelm (6 November 1858 - 6 October 1944)[1] was a Swedish visual artist.
Fanny Elisabeth Wilhelmina Hjelm was born on 6 November 1858 in Lindesberg, Sweden.
Known as Fanny Hjelm, she studied at Slöjdskolan (now Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts and Design) and then at Konstakademien, the Royal Swedish Academy of Fine Arts in Stockholm between 1878 and 1884.[2]
Hjelm painted floral still lifes, landscapes and portrait miniatures, the latter often on ivory.[3] Sitters included prominent figures from Swedish society, and the arts, such as Ellen Roosval von Hallwyl[4] and members of the Swedish royal family, including King Gustaf V of Sweden and his Queen, Victoria of Baden.[5] [6]
Hjelm's work is held in the collections of the Nationalmuseum, the national gallery of Sweden,[7] and Skokloster Castle.[8] Four of her paintings are held by the Finnish National Gallery, alongside 12 letters between Hjelm and art collector Paul Sinebrychoff dating from the first years of the twentieth century.[9]
Hjelm died on 6 October 1944 in Stockholm,[10] and is buried at Norra begravningsplatsen cemetery outside the city.[11]