Hariton Pushwagner | |
Birth Name: | Terje Brofos |
Birth Date: | 2 May 1940 |
Birth Place: | Oslo, Norway |
Death Place: | Oslo, Norway |
Nationality: | Norwegian |
Known For: | Pop art |
Terje Brofos (2 May 1940 – 24 April 2018), better known by stage name Hariton Pushwagner, was a Norwegian Pop artist.
Born as Terje Brofos during a bomb attack in May 1940, he grew in Berg, a neighborhood in the North End[1] of Oslo. In 1944, he was severely injured in a traffic accident. His father Fritjof was an engineer who struggled with alcohol.[2] His mother Elsa worked as a biochemist and would eventually leave her husband.[3]
During his youth, he excelled in both summer and winter sports. He became one of Norway's best tennis players and in 1955 played in a doubles final for the Norwegian championship with Arne Melander, a match which the duo lost.[3]
Pushwagner finished his education at the State's School of Art and Design of Oslo in 1959. He stated that he quit drawing for a period after his studies and that he struggled for several years to find his personal style.[4]
Pushwagner described himself as a spiritual student of Norwegian author Axel Jensen, whom he met at Kunstnernes Hus in 1968.[5] Pushwagner and Jensen lived together for a time, partly in an apartment in Oslo, Norway and partly in Fredrikstad, Norway; Stockholm, Sweden and Menorca, Spain. Pushwagner illustrated Jensen's book Og resten står skrivd i stjernene/And the Rest is Writ(ten) in the Stars (1995). Fascinated by comics since childhood, Pushwagner was inspired to start the series "Soft City" and "Doktor Fantastisk" during this period.[3]
Pushwagner won back the rights to his drawings from Morten Dreyer in 2009.
In July 2012, London-based publisher Art / Books published an extensive monograph on his work[6] to coincide with an exhibition at MK Gallery in Milton Keynes, United Kingdom that subsequently toured to Haugar Vestfold Kunstmuseum in Norway and Museum Boijmans van Beuningen in the Netherlands.[7] [8] [9]
Pushwagner was twice divorced and had two daughters.
He was diagnosed with lung cancer and died at Diakonhjemmet Hospital on 24 April 2018.[10] He was 77.
He is buried at Our Saviour’s cemetery in Oslo.