Människor och målningar. Inredningsmåleri i hälsingegårdar 1750–1800
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Date
2024-05-13
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Abstract
Hälsingland is a province that historically had no nobility and where farmers were
freeholders. From the end of the Middle Ages to the second half of the 19th century,
wall and ceiling paintings have been preserved in or from farmhouses, partly as
intact rooms, partly as loose wall canvases or fragments. The preserved rooms date
mainly from the 19th century, and some farms with interiors of this kind have been
declared World Heritage Sites. There are eight farms from the period 1750–1800 in
Hälsingland, in which there are whole room interiors or from which such interiors
come from. These have formed the research material for the thesis.
The purpose of the thesis is to examine interior painting in Hälsingland farms
during the second half of the 18th century from a cultural-historical perspective
by discussing the context of creation, the regional society, the people involved and
how interior painting has been used from its creation to the present day. Theory and
methodology have been derived from Material Culture Studies and Viccy Coltmans
model has been used for the study.
The study shows that there is evidence that several of the eight examined farm
households, who originally commissioned the painting a few years before the dating,
had received an inheritance, which can be interpreted as a contributing factor to the
family’s financial ability to invest in a newly painted interior in the already existing
festivity room, or a completely new building. The identity of the painter can be estab
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lished in six of the eight farms. Mainly local folk painters were hired, but in one case
a master painter from Hudiksvall was engaged. He had recently painted interiors in
the parish church where the farmer was the churchwarden.
The motifs in the eight studied farms are mainly biblical, both from the Old and
New Testaments and the Old Testament Apocrypha. The second largest category
is allegorical representations. Secular images, such as portraits of contemporary
celebrities, illustrations of fairy tales and fables, and still lifes of flowers and birds, are
also included. In one of the studied farms there are no figurative scenes, but rather
rocaille, floral arrangements and patterns
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Keywords
Folk art, 18th Century, Material Culture Studies, Paul Hallberg, Jonas Hertman, Erik Ersson, Decorated farmhouses of Hälsingland, Hälsingland