Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Qupperneq 73

Tímarit Þjóðræknisfélags Íslendinga - 01.01.1962, Qupperneq 73
EINAR JÓNSSON 55 years in Copenhagen, during which time Jónsson completed the “Wave of the Ages” and produced, on com- mission, monuments to Jónas Hall- grímsson (the Icelandic poet d. 1845) and to Iceland’s first settler Ingólfur Arnarson (after the original made in Rome). During these years he showed “Man and Woman” at Das Kiinstlerhaus in Vienna and parti- cipated in a Danish exhibition in London.8 Jónsson’s efforts at earning a liv- ing by his art in Denmark proved abortive. A year’s stay in Berlin, 1909-1910, met with the same fail- ure; so he returned to Copenhagen. The following year he was called to Iceland and commissioned to do a memorial to Jón Sigurðsson (leader in Iceland’s struggle for in- dependence, d. 1879), which now stands in a public square in front of the parliament building in Reyk- javík. After completing the statue the same year, Jónsson went back to Copenhagen, where, with the exception of short stays in London and Lund, he lived until 1914. In 1908 Jónsson offered to give his nation all the works he had already produced on the condition that the Icelandic government move them to Iceland and provide a museum for them. The offer was accepted, and in 1914 he moved to Iceland. Con- struction of the museum, however, was not begun until 1916, when 20,000 krónur had been secured by voluntary contributions by indi- viduals in addition to the 10,000 krónur granted earlier by the Al- thing.9 8. Ibid., p. 237. 9. Ibid., p. 275-76. In 1917 Jónsson married Miss Anna M. M. Jorgensen of Copen- hagen. That same year they went to the United States, where he was commissioned to make a statue of Þorfinn Karlsefni, the first white settler in America, which now stands in Fairmont Park, Philadelphia.10 At the end of the war, he went to Denmark to oversee the trans- portation of his works to Iceland. Unfortunately some of them had been damaged in storage—some beyond repair, but what could be salvaged was moved to Iceland in 1920. By that time the museum had been completed, although it was not opened to the public until 1923. There the artist lived and worked, except for occasional soujourns abroad, until his death on October 22, 1954. Upon his death, his na- tion inherited all the works pre- served in his museum, that is, al- most all the works he ever created. The visitor to Jónsson’s museum is immediately struck by the di- verse nature of his works: They in- clude statues, reliefs, busts, archi- tectural designs, sketches, a n d paintings, although the artist’s greatness lies primarily in his sculptures. Apart from his many monuments, some of which are mentioned above, he often chose his motifs from Icelandic folklore, mythology, and the Bible. In the first group belong, e.g., “Outlaws” (1898-1900), “Dawn” (1897-1906), and “The Spell Broken” (1916- 1918); in the second, “Ýmir and Auðhumla” (1907-1909), “The Birth of Psyche” (1915-1918), and “Thor Wrestling with Age” (1939-1940); 10. Einar Jinsson, p. 12.
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