Rosas (Roser) - Anna Syberg
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Aquarela sobre papel - 60x74 - 1902
Anna Louise
Birgitte Syberg (7 January 1870, Faaborg – 4 July 1914, Copenhagen) was a Danish painter who, together with her husband Fritz Syberg, was one of the Funen
Painters (Fynboerne) who lived and worked on the island
of Funen. She is remembered for her lively watercolours of flower
arrangements.
Anna Syberg
attended the technical school in Faaborg after which she studied painting
under Ludvig Brandstrup and Karl Jensen in Copenhagen. In 1882, she met Fritz Syberg
who was serving an apprenticeship as a house painter with her father Peter
Syrak Hansen. The two quickly fell for each other and after Anna had spent a
period decorating porcelain at the Royal Copenhagen factory, they married in 1894 and set up
home in the little village of Svanninge, just
north of Faaborg. In 1902, they moved to Pilegården near Kerteminde, also on the island of Funen,
where Anna became a close friend of Johannes Larsen, another member of the Fynboerne group
of artists. From 1910 to 1913, the family spent three years at Pisa in
Italy.
From 1898,
Anna Syberg exhibited at Charlottenborg and in
1912 her works were presented at Den Frie Udstilling. She
was frequently a model for her husband and appears in several of his works.
During her lifetime, she received little recognition for her work, often being
referred to as a flower painter. This was probably due to the fact that it was
difficult for women artists to enter what was essentially a men's world.
The sister of
artist Peter Hansen, Anna Syberg
was the mother of several children including the artist Ernst Syberg and the composer Franz Syberg.
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