John Edmund Strandberg

John Edmund Strandberg (16 November 1911 Sweden - 25 August 1996 Canada)[1][2] was a painter born in Brännkyrka, Stockholm County, Sweden who later immigrated to Ontario, Canada.[3]

John Edmund Strandberg
Born
Johan Edmund Strandberg

16 November 1911
Died25 August 1996
Ontario, Canada
NationalitySwedish and Canadian
Known forLandscape art
MovementExpressionism; Impressionism; Arts and Crafts
Spouse(s)Eva Forsberg

Biography

Born to Richard Gustaf Karlsson Strandberg and Ingrid Johansson in Brännkyrka,[4] Strandberg began painting when he was still a child. He received his master's degree in Cabinet Making in 1930.

At the onset of World War II he put his career on hold in order to join the Finnish Army.

After the war, he studied with European artists in Stockholm, before immigrating to Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in 1951, with his wife Eva Forsberg and their two daughters Inger and Marianne.

In Canada, he anglicized his name from "Johan" to "John", a common practice among immigrants. He joined the Art Guild of York-Scarborough and studied under artists like Thomas Frederick Haig Chatfield and Arnold Benjamin Hodgkins.[5]

Work

Strandberg was a plein air landscape painter who painted in oils, using a palette knife of his own design. His inspiration was the Canadian landscape.[6] He also did some florals and the occasional portrait.

Strandberg toured Canada, the United States and Europe on solo exhibitions, as well as participating in several art exhibitions, such as The World of Arts and Crafts, United Artists, and The Artists Touring Association,[7] even living in the US for a few years.

Signature

He signed his art as "J. Strandberg". The logo of The Art Guild of York-Scarborough with the initials "J S" is found on the back of some of his works.

Collections

Stranberg's paintings can be found in several institutional collections and other art galleries, banks, insurance companies, and trust companies, as well as in private collections.[8]

gollark: It *is* annoying how badly many countries' electoral systems are broken.
gollark: But they didn't really want to explicitly say as much because it would sound bad.
gollark: A plausible explanation I heard about the whole thing is that the Navy was assuming that it wouldn't go away for a while, and that the people on their ships were not very at risk of bad symptoms but also likely to get infected in large numbers and couldn't really be pulled out of service.
gollark: I too enjoy dying from easily preventable diseases.
gollark: Also,> The Calusa had a stratified society, consisting of "commoners" and "nobles" in Spanish terms. A few leaders governed the tribe. They were supported by the labor of the majority of the Calusa.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.