
Interior with the Painter Oluf Wold-Torne
Thorvald Erichsen·1901
Historical Context
Thorvald Erichsen's Interior with the Painter Oluf Wold-Torne, painted in 1901, is the companion work to his earlier group portrait of the Wold-Torne brothers, focusing this time on Oluf alone within a domestic interior. Oluf Wold-Torne was a significant Norwegian Post-Impressionist painter, and Erichsen's portrayal of him in his private environment — neither posing nor performing — captures the informal self-possession of one artist observed by another. The National Museum holds both interior portraits as important documents of the artistic community around 1900.
Technical Analysis
The interior composition is structured around the quality of light entering the room, with Oluf Wold-Torne placed as a natural element within the domestic space rather than as a formal portrait subject. Erichsen's Post-Impressionist colour sensibility enlivens what might otherwise be a conventional interior scene.




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