Bodil Cappelen (born April 26, 1930) is a Norwegian painter, textile artist, and book illustrator.[1] She has also written children's books.

Early life edit

Cappelen was born in Stavanger,[2] the daughter of Johan Munthe Cappelen from Oslo and Edith Heiberg from Leikanger. Her father was a judge and was known for his dissenting opinion in the acquittal of Police Chief Knut Rød after the Second World War.[3] Bodil grew up with two sisters: Lotte Cappelen Thiis and Eli Heiberg. She attended the Norwegian National Academy of Craft and Art Industry from 1948 to 1951.

Life and work edit

Cappelen's first marriage was to the author and painter Finn Strømsted. The couple had two children, Aili Strømsted and Rune Cappelen Strømsted. From 1975 to 1994, Cappelen first lived with and then married the poet Olav H. Hauge in Ulvik in Hardanger.[4][5] They were married on January 27, 1978. From 1977 to 1997 Cappelen was supported by a government guaranteed income for artists.

In the 1970s Cappelen had many solo exhibitions of tapestries, and between 1968 and 1982 she also participated many times in the Southern Norway Exhibition (Sørlandsutstillingen), the Western Norway Exhibition (Vestlandsutstillingen), and the Autumn Exhibition with tapestries.

After her last solo exhibition at the Artists' House gallery in 1981, Cappelen decided to illustrate children's books. She has illustrated five books for the Sami publisher Davvi Girji in Karasjok, with two of them featuring her own text.[1] She also illustrated the book Norske barnerim og regler (Norwegian Children's Rhymes and Songs; Aschehoug 1984). In cooperation with Olav H. Hauge, she published the primer ABC, with editions appearing in 1986, 1987, 1995, and 2008.[1]

In 1991, Cappelen had her first solo exhibition of oil paintings, at the Nota Bene Gallery in Oslo. Since then she has had many exhibitions of her paintings and she is still producing paintings. Since 1998, Cappelen has lived in Son.[1][6]

Bodil Cappelen cites Eugène Delacroix's saying as her own motto: “The first merit of a painting is to be a feast for the eye.”[1]

Cappelen is a member of the Norwegian Visual Artists Association (Norske billedkunstnere, NBK) and the Association of Norwegian Painters (Landsforeningen Norske Malere, KNM). Cappelen's art has been purchased by the Bergen Art Gallery (Bergen Billedgalleri), the Norwegian Arts Council, and several public buildings.

Solo exhibitions edit

  • 1972: Young Artists Society, tapestry
  • 1981: Bergen Art Society, tapestry
  • 1981: Faorese Art Society (Listafélag Førøya), Faroe Islands, tapestry
  • 1981: Artists House, Oslo, tapestry
  • 1991: Nota Bene Gallery, Oslo, paintings
  • 1992: Kolibri Hallery, Haugesund, paintings
  • 1992: Hardanger Folk Museum, paintings
  • 1997: Hjadlane Gallery, Osa, paintings
  • 2000: Gallery X, Son, paintings
  • 2003: Næs Iron Works Museum, Ti malerier av ovnsplatemotiver fra 1600-tallet (Ten Paintings of Spark Screen Designs from the 1600s)
  • 2004: Moss Town and Industry Museum. Vintervarme. Fra jernverk til kunstverk (Winter Heat: From Iron Works to Artworks)
  • 2006: Tromsø Museum, 70 illustrations from Sami children's books

Awards edit

2012: Anvil Award (Norwegian: Amboltprisen)

Bibliography edit

  • Pingvinen Po (Po the Penguin; also published in Lule Sami and Southern Sami), picture book (1993)[6]
    • Pinviidna Pu (1993)[6]
  • Modige Marja (Courageous Marja; also published in Lule Sami and Southern Sami), picture book (1994)[6]
    • Jálos Márjá (1994)[6]
  • Brev 1970–1975. Olav H. Hauge og Bodil Cappelen (Letters 1970–1975. Olav H. Hauge and Bodil Cappelen), biography and memoir (1996)[6]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Norberg, Av Paul. "Utgir Hauge i USA". Dagsavisen.
  2. ^ Hvem er hvem? 1984. Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget, p. 200.
  3. ^ Søbye, Espen. 2003. Kathe, alltid vært i Norge: biografi. Oslo: Forlaget Oktober, p. 136.
  4. ^ Hauge, Olav H. 2008. The Dream We Carry: Selected and Last Poems of Olav H. Hauge. Port Townsend, WA: Copper Canyon Press, p. xii.
  5. ^ Thresher, Tanya. 2004. Twentieth-Century Norwegian Writers, volume 297. Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson/Gale, p. 149.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Bodil Cappelen".

Further reading edit

  • Østby, Leif, (ed.). 1983. Norsk kunstnerleksikon, 2. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. ISBN 82-00-06535-9.
  • Haugen, Lambrecht. 2008. Cappelen-slekten 1627-2008. Rosendal.

External links edit