Fundación MAPFRE, Madrid
19 February to 17 May 2026.
The Hamburger Kunsthalle is presenting the multifaceted oeuvre of the Swedish artist Anders Zorn (1860–1920) for the first time in a large-scale exhibition. One of the most famous artists in the world around 1900, Zorn enjoyed a meteoric rise in Europe and achieved fame in the United States with portraits of prominent members of high society and even of two Presidents. Sweden still recognises him today as one of the country’s premier artists. Here in Germany, museum-goers now have the rare opportunity to discover the work of the painter, graphic artist and sculptor in this survey show.
The over 150 exhibits include major works such as Midsummer Dance (1897), arguably Zorn’s most well-known painting and one that is still often used today to convey a characteristic picture of Sweden or to promote the country. Also on view, however, are rarely shown paintings and watercolours as well as the artist’s impressive etchings and a few small sculptures. Alongside portraits, the exhibition also features Nordic landscapes, everyday views of Zorn’s Swedish homeland and scenes from European cities, and also nudes depicted in natural surroundings.
At the invitation of Kunsthalle director Alfred Lichtwark, Zorn visited Hamburg in the winter of 1891/92 and created several atmospheric harbour scenes, which can be seen in the show. Lichtwark hoped to expand the »Collection of Pictures from Hamburg« he had launched in 1889 by inviting acclaimed artists to visit the city, and Zorn was the first non-German artist thus honoured.
The roster of institutions and private collections that have lent works for the exhi- bition attest to the Swedish artist’s high international standing. Works have made their way to the Kunsthalle from Berlin, Boston, Florence, Geneva, Gothenburg, Helsinki, Mora, New York, Stockholm and Washington, among other places. Around 30 etchings and a drawing by Zorn from the museum’s own collection are also on display.
The artist who would become one of the foremost talents of the century grew up in modest circumstances in the central Swedish province of Dalarna and already caused a sensation during his student years at the Stockholm Art Academy. Stra- tegically adept, Zorn found in his partner and later wife Emma Lamm someone who could mediate important contacts and help plan his career. He indulged his wanderlust at an early age, travelling in the 1880s to France, Spain, North Africa and the Ottoman Empire.
The artist gained a foothold in the English art market during a few years spent in London (1882–1885), experienced the breakthrough of Impressionism first-hand in Paris (1888–1896), and took the USA by storm in 1893. A flair for contemporary themes coupled with unrivalled technical facility assured Zorn tremendous success. Imbued with lightness and buoyancy, his works exude a fascinating spontaneity – belying an elaborate and carefully calculated working process. After initially working almost exclusively with watercolours, Zorn increasingly concentrated on oil painting from 1887 until the end of his career. In 1896 he settled permanently in Mora with his wife, where he died in 1920 at the age of only 60.
In eight exhibition chapters, viewers can discover Anders Zorn as a dazzling, highly versatile artist. Along- side Impressionist elements in paintings such as Mother Dressing Her Child (1888) and Omnibus I (1890), other facets of his work betray the influence of diametrically opposed artistic tendencies of the period, such as salon painting, for example in the portraits In Mourning (1880) and Elizabeth Sherman Cameron (1900).
Cosmopolitan scenes form a thread running through Zorn’s oeuvre, such the painting Girl with a Cigarette (ca. 1892), but these are interspersed with motifs from his swedish home region of Dalarna, as in the painting Midnight (1891), which depicts a woman rowing. Such subjects come to the fore in his later work, which evokes the matter-of-fact harmony of human and nature, a theme that increasingly shaped his artistic self-image as well as his identity.
The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue (312 pages, Hirmer Verlag) featuring high- quality colour illustrations of all works on view as well as a number of essays exploring the current state of research on Anders Zorn. The catalogue is available for 39 euros in the museum shop or at www.freunde- der-kunsthalle.de at the bookstore price of 49,90 euros.
The exhibition is a cooperative project with the Fundación MAPFRE, Madrid, where it will be presented from 19 February to 17 May 2026.
Curator: Dr. Markus Bertsch Assistant Curator: Jana Kunst Research Assistant: Michelle Adler
IMAGES
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Mitternacht, 1891
Öl auf Leinwand, 69 x 103 cm Zornmuseet, Mora © Zornmuseet, Mora
Anders Zorn (1860–1920)
Im Freien, 1890
Öl auf Leinwand, 69 x 101,5 cm Ateneum Art Museum, Helsinki
© Foto: Finnish National Gallery / Hannu Aaltonen
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Spitzensaum, 1894
Öl auf Leinwand, 42 x 48 cm Zornmuseet, Mora © Zornmuseet, Mora
Anders Zorn (1860–1920)
Die lesende Emma Zorn, 1887 Öl auf Leinwand, 40,2 x 60,6 cm Zornmuseet, Mora
© Zornmuseet, Mora
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Hamburger Hafen, 1891
Aquarell auf Papier, 46,5 x 67 cm Nationalmuseum, Stockholm © Nationalmuseum, Stockholm Foto: Cecilia Heisser
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Elizabeth Sherman Cameron, 1900 Öl auf Leinwand, 147,5 x 113,5 cm Privatsammlung
© Amells Fine Art Gallery, Stockholm Foto: Patric Evinger
Anders Zorn (1860–1920)
Die Kirchenbucht bei Lidingö, 1883 Aquarell und Goache, 35,4 x 25,2 cm Zornmuseet, Mora
© Zornmuseet, Mora
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Rauchende junge Frau, um 1892 Radierung, 15,9 x 12,0 cm Hamburger Kunsthalle, Kupferstichkabinett © Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk Foto: Christoph Irrgang.
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Selbstporträt in Rot, 1915
Öl auf Leinwand, 120 x 90 cm Zornmuseet, Mora © Zornmuseet, Mora
Anders Zorn (1860–1920)
Stephen Grover Cleveland,
1899
Öl auf Leinwand, 122 x 91,5 cm National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington Schenkung des Reverends Thomas G. Cleveland
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Mittsommertanz, 1897
Öl auf Leinwand, 140 x 98 cm Nationalmuseum, Stockholm © Nationalmuseum, Stockholm Foto: Cecilia Heisser
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Omnibus I, um 1890
Öl auf Leinwand, 99,5 x 66 cm Nationalmuseum, Stockholm Ankauf 1985, Peter and Malin Beijer Fonds
© Nationalmuseum, Stockholm Foto: Anna Danielsson
Anders Zorn (1860–1920) Hirtin, 1908
Öl auf Leinwand, 121 x 91,5 cm Zornmuseet, Mora
© Zornmuseet, Mora