



It’s 150 years since Karin Larsson was born. Karin Larsson, wife of the more famous Carl Larsson, painter. Sweden is celebrating because Karin Larsson is important: She had fresh ideas and thoughts on interior and furniture design, fashion, textiles and gardening. She was, in short, a style icon. Lilla Hyttnäs, the Larssons’ famous home in Dalarna, was not a joint creation, although Carl Larsson mostly took the credit. In reality it was Karin Larsson’s oeuvre. “To show Karin Larsson in all her glory has been a dream for many years,” says Marianne Nilsson, curator at Carl Larsson-gården. “Her hand and her eye is present in all the rooms here, especially in the amazing fabrics that give the home such coziness. One hundred years later, Karin’s designs still feel modern and not until now is she receiving the attention she truly deserves.” It was Carl Larsson’s watercolors of the house and family life at Sundborn that made him a beloved artist and brought him international fame. But the work to lift Karin out of her husband’s shadow began in 1967 with a biography written by a son-in-law, and really took off with the exhibition “Karin and Carl Larsson — creators of the Swedish style,” in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 1997. And now, eight decades after her death, Karin Larsson is again in focus. Recently the book “Karin Larssons värld — inredning, trädgård, mat, mode, textil” came out, and her passion for gardening is the focal point of “Åt solsidan på Sofiero,” an exhibition in Helsingborg. Carl Larsson would often compliment his wife in private, among friends, saying: “Anything she touches becomes beautiful” and “Karin is always right,” but outside the home she was not known. She was born Karin Bergöö in 1859 and died in 1928, nine years after her husband. She came from a loving and affluent family and received Lilla Hyttnäs as a gift from her father. It was in the Scandinavian artist colony in Grez-sur-Loing, France, that Karin and Carl met. They moved permanently to Sundborn and Lilla Hyttnäs in 1901. The Larssons went against the heavy dark interior, the fashion of the time, by letting light and color into their home. “They both dared to be different, even provokingly so,” Nilsson continues. Did Karin feel bitter about having to quit her own artistry in order to stay at home and take care of her husband and their eight children? Says Nilsson: “I get that question a lot, but it doesn’t seem like she did. Rather it seems that she blossomed at Sundborn after many years of traveling around. She had the peace there to develop her feel for textiles and her passion for gardening.” Carl Larsson’s paintings frequently features beautiful flowers, but they were always arranged by Karin.
Article from Nordstjernan--the Swedish Newspaper in America


