BJO Nordfeldt Rue St. Jacques

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B.J.O. Nordfeldt: Titled, “Rue St. Jacques.” Etching, 10-1/2” BY 12-1/2”. Signed in pencil lower center right. Etching is hinge mounted on the right side. BIOGRAPHY FROM ASKART: Swedish immigrant Bror Julius Nordfeldt became one of the better known of the early 20th-century American modernist artists. He was an etcher and engraver as well as oil painter. He gained early attention for his abstract, non-academic depiction of everyday subject matter such as still lifes, portraits and figures. His treatment of Indians was startling to many as he showed them with stylistic distortion and abstraction, which conveyed an air of mystery that invited viewers to regard them as human beings of psychological depth and not just curiousity-arousing ethnic figures. Bror Julius Nordfeldt came to the United States in 1891 at age fourteen and went to Chicago, where he took a job as a typesetter in a printing firm with a Swedish-language newspaper. His employer saw his artist talent and encouraged Nordfeldt to get formal training. Beginning 1899, he enrolled at the Chicago Art Institute and returned for several extended periods of time, living at one point in the outbuildings of the 1893 Columbian Exposition as part of the 57th Street Artists Colony. While a student at the Institute, Nordfeldt became a mural assistant to Albert Herter who was filling read more