Harriet Backer was a pioneer who has influenced Norwegian art for generations. In this exhibition visitors could step into her shimmering world of colour and light, inspired by the French Impressionists. Through interiors, still lifes, portraits and landscapes, the visitors met one of Norway's, and the Nordic region's, foremost artists from around 1900.
Harriet Backer (1845–1932) was a pioneer on many levels and the exhibition highlighted the innovative qualities of her art, as well as her central position in the Norwegian art scene at the turn of the twentieth century. How did she become such a prominent figure in Norwegian art? Why did a whole generation of young painters, men and women alike, choose to become her pupils and successors?
The fifty years of Harriet Backer’s career saw radical changes in Norwegian society and in women’s rights and career opportunities. She established herself as an artist on a cosmopolitan art scene, spending fifteen years abroad. First, she resided in Munich, thereafter in Paris, before returning to her home country as a mature artist.
Backer’s main inspiration in France was impressionism and the paintings of Claude Monet. Like Monet, she was an exceptional colourist and a skilled portrayer of light. She applied the principles of plein air painting to her atmospheric and quiet interiors, in which she depicted the interplay between the figure, the room and the effects of light. She explored the contrasts between indoors and outdoors, the multifaceted qualities of light and the way it changed from morning to evening and from spring to winter.
Backer was a meticulous observer of the world around her and she portrayed sensitively the many rooms of her time and those who inhabited them. Her subject matters range from the middle-class home to the everyday life of bourgeois women, from peasant interiors and rural life to the church as a space for spiritual experience and rituals, as well as the room of her own as a place for artistic creation, music and creative community.
The exhibition Harriet Backer contained some 90 works, including loans from the National Museum in Oslo, Kode in Bergen and other public and private collections. The exhibition was on view at the National Museum in Oslo in autumn 2023 and at Nationalmuseum in Stockholm in spring and summer 2024. It will be on show at Musée d’Orsay in Paris in autumn 2024 and Kode in Bergen in spring 2025. The curator of the show at Nationalmuseum was Carina Rech.
Franco–Nordic collaboration
The exhibition Harriet Backer has been initiated by The National Museum, Oslo and Kode Bergen Art Museum, and organized in collaboration with Nationalmuseum Stockholm and Musée d’Orsay, Paris.
The exhibition is supported by the Savings Bank Foundation DNB, The Bergesen Foundation and H. Westfal-Larsen og Hustru Anna Westfal-Larsens Almennyttige Fond, Yvonne and Bjarne Rieber, Ragnhild Willumsen Grieg, Per Grieg jr. and Grieg Foundation.