Jenny Nyström







Jenny Nyström-Stoopendaal


Jenny Eugenia Nyström (13 or 15 June 1854 in Kalmar, Sweden – 17 January 1946 in Stockholm) was a painter and illustrator who is mainly known as the person who created the Swedish image of the jultomte on numerous Christmas cards and magazine covers, thus linking the Swedish version of Santa Claus to the gnomes of Scandinavian folklore.
[1]




Contents






  • 1 Background


  • 2 Career


  • 3 Santa Claus and Christmas


  • 4 Selected illustrations


    • 4.1 Other illustrations




  • 5 See also


  • 6 References


  • 7 Other sources


  • 8 External links





Background


Her father was a school teacher and piano teacher, and also the cantor of the Kalmar Castle Church. When Jenny Nyström was eight years old, the family moved to Gothenburg, where her father had found a better paying teaching job.


In 1865 she started in the Gothenburg art school Göteborgs Musei-, Rit- och Målarskola, today known as Konsthögskolan Valand, and in 1873 she was admitted to the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts in Stockholm, where she studied for eight years. Thanks to a scholarship, this was followed by studies in Paris 1882-1886, at Académie Colarossi and Académie Julian.



Career




Jenny Nyström


While in Paris, she discovered the booming postcard market, and tried to persuade the Swedish publishing house Bonnier to start producing postcards, but they declined. Lille Viggs äventyr på julafton ("Little Vigg's Adventures on Christmas Eve"), written by the author Viktor Rydberg inspired Jenny Nyström. She made drawings accompanying this tale. Viktor Rydberg saw them and suggested the Bonniers publishing company to release the book. After they declined, publisher S. A. Hedlund released it in 1871. The short Christmas tale for all ages was widely printed and has since become a Christmas classic in Sweden. Jenny Nyström eventually became Sweden’s most productive painter and illustrator. For many years, her illustrations were distributed by Strålin & Persson AB in Falun .


In 1887, at the age of 33, she married medical student Daniel Stoopendaal (1853-1927)
, brother of fellow artists Henrik Wilhelm Johan Stoopendaal (1846 - 1906), Ferdinand Jacob Stoopendaal (1850-), and Georg Vilhelm Stoopendaal (1866-1953). Due to tuberculosis Daniel was never able to finish his studies and take up his intended profession. It was instead up to Jenny to support herself, her husband and their son through her artistry, while Daniel handled her business affairs. He died in 1927.


In 1933 her son, Curt Nyström Stoopendahl (1893-1965), followed in her footsteps and also became a popular postcard and poster artist, staying very close to his mother’s artistic style. Even his signature, “Curt Nyström”, looked like his mother’s. Likewise, her brother-in-law, Georg Stoopendaal, already in the beginning of the 19th century found postcards to be a good source of income, unlike his more serious paintings, and his Christmas cards are also clearly inspired by Jenny Nyström's.





God Jul ("Good Yule")



Santa Claus and Christmas


Nyström created the Swedish image of the jultomte on numerous Christmas cards and magazine covers, thus linking the Swedish version of Santa Claus to the gnomes of Scandinavian folklore.
[2]



Selected illustrations




  • Fornnordiska sagor, Albert Ulrik Bååth, author (1886) (early Norse tales)


  • Den poetiska Eddan, Nils Frederick Sander, author (1893) (the poetic Edda)


  • Barnkammarens Bok (Stockholm: Fahlcrantz & Co. 1903) (the nursery book)



Other illustrations




See also


  • Haddon Sundblom


References





  1. ^ Jenny Nyström (Kalmar läns museum)


  2. ^ Jenny Nyström (Kalmar läns museum)




Other sources



  • Forsberg Warringer, Gunnel Jenny Nyström: konstnärinna (1992)

  • Forsberg Warringer, Gunnel Jenny Nyström: målaren och illustratören (1996)



External links







  • Jenny Nyström on the Kalmar County Museum website

  • Jenny Nyström Christmas cards

  • Jenny Eugenia Nyström









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