Helena Westermarck
{{Short description|Finnish artist and writer (1857–1938)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}
{{Infobox artist
| name = Helena Westermarck
| image = Helena Westermarck.jpg
| image_size = 180px
| caption = Westermarck in 1894
| birth_name = Helena Charlotta Westermarck
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1857|11|20|df=yes}}
| birth_place = Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1938|4|5|1857|11|20|df=yes}}
| death_place = Helsinki, Finland
| nationality = Finnish
| field = Painter, writer
| training =
| movement =
| works =
| patrons =
| awards =
}}
Helena Charlotta Westermarck (20 November 1857, Helsinki – 5 April 1938, Helsinki) was a Swedish-speaking Finnish artist and writer.{{cite web |last1=Konttinen |first1=Riitta |title=Westermarck, Helena (1857–1938) |url=https://kansallisbiografia.fi/kansallisbiografia/henkilo/4161 |website=Kansallisbiografia |accessdate=18 August 2020 |date=22 April 2015}}{{cite web |title=Westermarck, Helena |url=https://www.kirjasampo.fi/fi/kulsa/saha3%253Au1aa832e8-2498-4bcb-9b99-be347a8dce20 |website=Kirjasampo |accessdate=18 August 2020}}{{cite news |last1=Uimonen |first1=Anu |title=Taiteilija kysyi tärkeitä kysymyksiä |url=https://www.hs.fi/kulttuuri/art-2000002589795.html |accessdate=18 August 2020 |work=Helsingin Sanomat |date=8 September 2009}} She is known for her pioneering biographies of women.{{Cite book |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/897069728 |title=Women telling nations |date=2014 |publisher=Editions Rodopi |others=Amelia Sanz Cabrerizo, Francesca Scott, Suzanna van Dijk |isbn=978-94-012-1112-3 |location=Amsterdam |oclc=897069728}}
Biography
Westermarck studied art at the Drawing School of the Finnish Art Society and the private academy of Adolf von Becker. During her studies, she met Helene Schjerfbeck, who remained a close friend for the rest of their lives. Westermarck and Schjerfbeck were a part of a group of female artists, "the painter sisters." This group included Maria Wiik and Elin Danielson-Gambogi.{{Cite web |title=Description of Portrait of Helena Westermarck |url=https://taide.art/artworks/SgZ_aXSxd0-1CkTbSnlGbQ/Helena-Westermarck|website=taide.art}}
Westermarck worked for long periods in France, often in the company of Schjerfbeck, and developed a sensible realistic style especially with portraits and figure compositions. At the Exposition Universelle (1889), she received honorable mention for her painting Strykerskor.
File:Helene Schjerfbeck - Portrait of Helena Westermarck.jpg, 1884]]
After contracting tuberculosis in 1884, she abandoned painting and devoted herself to writing as a critic.{{cite web|title=Sara's sisters: The tradition of women's literature in Finland from the 19th century to the early 20th century.| language=fi|access-date=13 November 2019 |url=https://digi.kirjastot.fi/files/original/3f230cb87f16f1d207733d558e3dfdba.pdf |publisher=Oulu City Library-Provincial Library |last1=Alarto |first1=Anne |last2=Kyrki |first2=Irma |last3=Saraste |first3=Maija}}
Westermarck began her writing career as a novelist. Her novels can be looked at as an artifact of women's history and the everyday life of upper- and middle-class women. She edited the Swedish-language women's magazine Nutid.{{cite journal|author=Julia Dahlberg
|year=2018|title=When artists became intellectuals:Female artistic persona and science as a significant other|journal=Persona Studies|volume=4
|issue=1|page=64|doi=10.21153/ps2018vol4no1art688|doi-access=free}}
Westermarck also made a significant contribution as a researcher through her cultural and historical works. In her research, she worked beside her brother, Edvard Westermarck, in the British Library. She began her pioneering biographic works in the early 1890s. These works include a series of biographies of female figures. Many of her biographies are on unknown female painters who were "discovered" in the 1980s, including Mathilda Rotkirch (1926). She also wrote about women who were pioneers in their respective fields, including Elisabeth Blomqvist (1916–17), Adelaide Ehrnrooth (1928), and Rosina Heikel (1930).
Westermarck's memoir was published in 1941.{{cite web|title=Westermarck, Helena|url=http://www.uppslagsverket.fi/sv/sok/view-103684-WestermarckHelena |publisher=Uppslagsverket Finland | language=Swedish |accessdate=26 June 2016}}
Selected works
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
- Ur studieboken I–II: Berättelser och utkast, 1890–91
- Framåt. Berättelse, 1894
- George Eliot och den engelska naturalistiska romanen. En litterär studie, 1894
- Nyländska folksagor berättade för ungdom af Helena Westermarck, 1897
- Lifvets seger, 1898
- "Tecken och minnesskrift från adertonhundratalet" I-III, 1900–1911:
- I I fru Ulrikas hem. Interiör från farmödrarnas tid, 1900
- II Ljud i natten. Berättelse, 1903
- III Vandrare. Roman, 1911
- Fredrika Runeberg. En litterär studie, 1904
- Dolda makter. Bilder och hägringar, 1905
- Bönhörelse. En historia, 1909
- Kvinnospår. Kulturbilder från 1800-talets förra del, 1913
- Elisabeth Blomqvist. Hennes Liv och gärning I–II, 1916–17
- Vägvisare. Berättelse, 1922
- Mathilda Rotkirch, Finlands första målarinna. En kulturbild, 1926
- Adelaïde Ehrnrooth. Kvinnospår i finländskt kulturliv, 1928
- Finlands första kvinnliga läkare Rosina Heikel, 1930
- Tre konstnärinnor. Fanny Churberg, Maria Wiik och Sigrid af Forselles, 1937
- Mina levnadsminnen, 1941
{{div col end}}
Gallery
{{gallery
|mode=packed
|height=160
|Anders Wilhelm Felixzon by Westermarck.jpg|Portrait of watchmaker Anders Wilhelm Felixzon, unknown date
|Kenraali Albert Westermarck.jpg|General Albert Westermarck, c. 1880
|Abessinier-1880.jpg|Abyssinian, 1880
|Helena Westermarck - Colarossin poika - A-2012-95 - Finnish National Gallery.jpg|Colarossi's Son, 1881
|Helena Westermarck - Ironesses; An Important Question.jpg|Ironesses; An Important Question, 1883
|Helena Westermarck - Vanha nainen - A IV 3788 - Finnish National Gallery.jpg|An Old Woman, 1883
|Lapsia tuvassa.jpg|Children in a Cottage, 1892
}}
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://runeberg.org/nfcl/0039.html Helene Westermarck] at Nordisk familjebok – Uggleupplagan. 32. Werth–Väderkvarn / col. 45–46 (1921).
- Dahlberg, Julia (2018). "When Artists Became Intellectuals. Female Artistic Persona and Science as a Significant Other", Persona Studies 4:1 (2018), 60–73.
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Category:Artists from Helsinki
Category:Finnish women artists
Category:Swedish women artists
Category:19th-century Finnish women writers
Category:19th-century Swedish women writers
Category:20th-century Finnish women writers
Category:20th-century Swedish women writers
Category:19th-century Finnish writers
Category:19th-century Swedish writers
Category:20th-century Finnish writers
Category:20th-century Swedish writers
Category:Writers from Helsinki
Category:Finnish expatriates in France