Loading Events

The Art of Work: Painting Labor in Nineteenth-Century Denmark

One hundred and fifty years ago a group of French artists staged their first independent exhibition in Paris and a radical movement called Impressionism was born. In July of that year, Danish artist Michael Ancher (1849–1927) joined Karl Madsen (1855–1938) in Skagen, Denmark, a fishing village located on the country’s northernmost point. As with the exhibition in Paris, Ancher’s arrival there marked the beginning of an artistic revolution that would upend the academic realism and traditional modes, subjects, and locales…

when

June 17, 2025 @ 10:00 am - 5:00 pm

where

1 Museum Drive
Greenwich, CT 06830-7157 United States

contact

Bruce Museum

about

One hundred and fifty years ago a group of French artists staged their first independent exhibition in Paris and a radical movement called Impressionism was born. In July of that year, Danish artist Michael Ancher (1849–1927) joined Karl Madsen (1855–1938) in Skagen, Denmark, a fishing village located on the country’s northernmost point. As with the exhibition in Paris, Ancher’s arrival there marked the beginning of an artistic revolution that would upend the academic realism and traditional modes, subjects, and locales of Danish Golden Age art. Inspired by growing discourses of nationalism and naturalism, Danish artists turned to scenes of everyday life, and especially of labor, with local men, women, and children featuring prominently in their work. Indeed, as Skagen developed into a thriving art colony in the late nineteenth century, labor had become a defining feature of Danish painting, paving the way for other artists—including Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864–1916) and L.A. Ring (1854–1933)—to contemplate the art of work and the work of art.

Organized thematically, the exhibition features a selection of twenty-eight works from the collection of Ambassador John L. Loeb, Jr., that illuminates the virtue and beauty of labor, whether domestic, intellectual, or manual. Women engaged in child rearing and ordinary household tasks—such as laundering, setting the table, or mending clothes—reflect the quiet intimacy of domestic work. Agricultural and maritime labor, which predominated in the coastal towns where many Danish artists lived and worked, also appear frequently in these paintings, which serve as testaments to the strength, endurance, and respectability of local farmers, fishermen, and their families. Other pictures capture the mental exertion required for piano playing, reading, writing, and painting, positioning artistic creativity as its own valued form of labor. While the portraits, landscapes, and interiors on view highlight the dynamism of work as a subject in nineteenth-century Danish art, they also stand as potent reminders of the artistic labor inherent to their making.

The Art of Work: Painting Labor in Nineteenth-Century Denmark is organized by the Bruce Museum and curated by Margarita Karasoulas, Curator of Art, and Jordan Hillman, Curatorial Associate. Support for The Art of Work: Painting Labor in Nineteenth-Century Denmark is generously provided by CT Department of Economic and Community Development, CT Humanities, Gabelli Funds, and the Charles M. and Deborah G. Royce Exhibition Fund.

join us:

Exhibition: An Gorta Mór: Selections from Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum

Exhibition organized by Quinnipiac University and the Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum of Fairfield This exhibition presents highlights from the collection of Ireland’s Great Hunger Museum, which explores the impact of the Irish Famine of 1845-1852 through artwork produced by eminent Irish and Irish-American artists of the past 170 years. The works on view in the exhibition will include paintings by late 19th- and early 20th‐century artists like James Brenan, Daniel Macdonald, James Arthur O’Connor and Jack B. Yeats, as well…

Fairfield University Art Museum

Exhibition: Famous & Family: Through the Lens of Trude Fleischmann

Austrian-born Trude Fleischmann (1895-1990) was one of the most accomplished female photographers of the 20th century. After great success in Vienna in the 20s photographing artists, models, and performers, she fled the Anschluss in 1938, first to Paris and then New York. She opened a studio on Fifth Avenue in 1940 and photographed many of the artists and intellectuals of the day, including Eleanor Roosevelt and Albert Einstein. This exhibition will include loans from the Wien Museum in Vienna, Austria,…

Bellermine Hall – Fairfield University

Exhibitions Highlights Tours – Tuesdays

Experience the highlights of the Bruce Museum’s exhibitions during a guided tour that is free with museum admission. No reservations are required but capacity is limited to twenty people on a first-come, first-served basis. Please check in with the front desk if you wish to join.

Bruce Museum

follow us: