subscribe: Posts | Comments

Exhibition: Moomin author’s art at Dulwich

0 comments

Tove Jansson, exhibition, illustrator, painter, Moomin author, retrospective, Dulwich Picture Gallery Tove Jansson’s works convey a profound understanding of human diversity.

Dulwich Picture Gallery is presenting the first major UK retrospective of work by one of the most celebrated illustrators of the 20th century, Tove Jansson (1914-2001) later this year.

Known internationally as creator of the Moomin characters and books, a phenomenon which continues to stretch across generations, Tove Jansson’s wider outputs of graphic illustration and painting are relatively unseen outside her home country of Finland.

The exhibition ‘Tove Jansson’ will bring together 150 works to reintroduce Jansson as an artist of exceptional breadth and talent, tracing the key stages of her prolific career including her surrealist-inspired paintings of the 1930s and abstract work of the 1960s, her satirical anti-war cartoons and book jacket designs, as well as a comprehensive display of early sketches for the Moomin characters and original comic strips.

Many of Jansson’s self-portraits, landscapes and still-lifes have never been seen before in the UK.

Although Jansson worked with various different media throughout her life, she always considered herself primarily a painter.

Works such as Mysterious Landscape, 1930s, reveal her early fascination with storytelling and colour, and a key selection of self-portraits painted during the 1930s and 1940s will allow us to interpret the emotional climate of the different stages of Jansson’s life.

During her first decades as an artist, Jansson produced an astonishing variety of illustrations.

At the young age of 15, her already formidable talent for caricature caught the attention of the liberal political satire magazine, Garm, and she went on to draw more than 500 caricatures and 100 cover images for them.

In contrast to her paintings, Jansson captured the ravages of war in her illustrations, employing them to such an extent that the political cartoons she published openly under her own name were quite daring.

A display of illustrations will reveal Jansson’s boldness and staunch opposition to war, fascism and totalitarianism.

Illustrating for Garm provided Jansson with the experimental space to introduce the first resemblance of Moomintroll who appeared as the long snouted troll, ‘Snork’ in 1943.

He would have frequent cameo appearances in her future drawings for the magazine, appearing in the sidelines or embroiled in the cartoon itself.

Jansson began writing stories about the Moomins during the war, and the Moomin characters brought together Jansson’s gifts as an artist with her fluency as a writer.

As early as the 1930s she had drawn Moomin-like figures that were black and thin, with red eyes, while the Moomins we know today are rounder and friendlier in appearance.

A display of original book illustrations for the series along with comic strips for the Finnish magazine, Ny Tid and the widely read The Evening News will provide an insight into the genesis of the Moomin phenomenon.

It will also highlight key influences on the subject and the development of Jansson’s illustrations including her experience of the war and the Jansson family dynamic.

Sophia Jansson, creative director of Moomin Characters – and Tove Jansson’s niece – said: “It was hugely important to Tove that she be recognised as a talented fine artist in addition to being the creator of the Moomins.

“Balancing her painting and her other projects alongside the demands that the Moomins made of her was something she struggled with all her life.

“I’m delighted that Dulwich Picture Gallery is putting on this exhibition which will make Tove’s wider artistic output accessible to a UK audience, who may not yet be familiar with her work outside of Moominvalley.”

Sointu Fritze, curator of the exhibition, said: “In Europe and the world today, Tove’s art and stories are more relevant than ever.

“Her entire oeuvre and way of thinking are characterised by the acceptance of differences.

“Although the family circle – both the artist’s own and the fictional Moomin family – is central, the door is always open for those seeking shelter.

“Tove Jansson’s works convey a profound understanding of human diversity.

“This show will reveal fascinating new insights into a colourful life and the work that came out of it.”

The exhibition runs from 25 October 2017 to 28 January 2018. For more information, click here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *