1913 - 1999. Known for: Non-figurative painting in tempera.
Per-Erik Böklin was a Swedish concrete painter who studied at Otte Sköld's painting school and the Academy of Fine Arts. He found inspiration during trips to Switzerland, France, Belgium, and...
Read full biography Per-Erik Böklin was a Swedish concrete painter who studied at Otte Sköld's painting school and the Academy of Fine Arts. He found inspiration during trips to Switzerland, France, Belgium, and England. Böklin's most productive and innovative period as an artist was during the 1940s and 1950s, and he...
Read full biography Per-Erik Böklin was a Swedish concrete painter who studied at Otte Sköld's painting school and the Academy of Fine Arts. He found inspiration during trips to Switzerland, France, Belgium, and England. Böklin's most productive and innovative period as an artist was during the 1940s and 1950s, and he participated in several important exhibitions. He has exhibited at various museums in Sweden, and a tribute exhibition was shown in 1975 at Eskilstuna Art Museum. In 1991-1992, Böklin donated all of...
Read full biography Per-Erik Böklin was a Swedish concrete painter who studied at Otte Sköld's painting school and the Academy of Fine Arts. He found inspiration during trips to Switzerland, France, Belgium, and England. Böklin's most productive and innovative period as an artist was during the 1940s and 1950s, and he participated in several important exhibitions. He has exhibited at various museums in Sweden, and a tribute exhibition was shown in 1975 at Eskilstuna Art Museum. In 1991-1992, Böklin donated all of his remaining 300 works to Eskilstuna Art Museum.
Per-Erik Böklin was a Swedish concrete painter who studied at Otte Sköld's painting school and the Academy of Fine Arts. He found inspiration during trips to Switzerland, France, Belgium, and England. Böklin's most productive and innovative period as an artist was during the 1940s and 1950s, and he participated in several important exhibitions. He has exhibited at various museums in Sweden, and a tribute exhibition was shown in 1975 at Eskilstuna Art Museum. In 1991-1992, Böklin donated all of his remaining 300 works to Eskilstuna Art Museum.