Visual art
Art exhibition
New Art. Charlotte Mannheimer and the Rise of Modernism in Gothenburg
The artist, art patron and cultural personage Charlotte Mannheimer was crucial in establishing modern art in Gothenburg during the 1910s and 1920s.
Even though she played an important role in the public art world, Charlotte Mannheimer has remained anonymous in art history. With this exhibition, the Gothenburg Museum of Art wishes to emphasize Charlotte Mannheimer’s major contribution to the art and culture scene in Gothenburg and in a broader Nordic context.
Early on, Mannheimer became friends with several of the artists who are considered to have paved the way for modernism’s breakthrough in Sweden, such as Tor Bjurström, Isaac Grünewald, Gösta Sandels and Birger Simonsson. Stylistically, many of these artists were highly influenced by Henri Matisse and several of them had been his pupils in Paris. Some of these artists later established their own group in Gothenburg, and their contact with Mannheimer was undoubtedly an important reason for their choice of city, since several of them received financial support from her.
Charlotte Mannheimer (1866-1934) had artistic ambitions herself, studying at the South Kensington Art School as well as the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen. Mannheimer’s art was shown in several much talked about exhibition contexts and she also spent several months at Henri Matisse’s art school in Paris.
During the years around 1920, Mannheimer ran the gallery Ny Konst (New Art), one of the first venues for contemporary art in the city. Both Gothenburg-based and Nordic artists were introduced to the public – among them several female artists such as Mollie Faustman, Tora Vega Holmström, Maj Bring and Sigrid Hjertén.
Over time, Charlotte Mannheimer’s role on the public art scene in Gothenburg took precedence over her own career as an artist. Through donations of contemporary art to the Gothenburg Museum’s art department and schools, she also ensured that the younger generation of artists were seen by a broader public.
Through her work, she contributed to increasing the understanding of contemporary art, spreading it to a wider audience and making Gothenburg a dynamic hub for modern art.
The exhibition presents a selection of Charlotte Mannheimer’s own works, along with works by the Nordic modernists she supported, such as Isaac Grünewald, Gösta Sandels, Sigrid Hjertén, Vera Nilsson, Jean Heiberg and Henrik Sørensen. Among the motifs are portraits with vibrant colours, decorative interiors and stylized landscapes, works which for the most part are from the Gothenburg Museum of Art’s collection. Here, modernist art is shown in a West Swedish and Norwegian perspective, providing a partly different angle on the story of the development of modernism in Sweden.