ArtistsHugo Simberg
Hugo Simberg

Hugo Simberg

Grand Duchy Of Finland, 1873–1917
WA-00023615
Helsinki
PaintingArt NouveauSymbolism
Representation
None documented
0
Institutional Exhibitions
33
Works in Collection
36
Assets Indexed
1
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
80%
Profile Completeness

Cultural Positioning

Influence Graph
No influence edges encoded yet.

Authority Records (1)

Field Verification (1 fields)

1 cross-verified · 0 single-source
  • Is PublishedManual· 100%

Source Registry (1)

About

Why this artist matters now

Hugo Simberg was a Finnish painter and sculptor whose work bridged Symbolism and Art Nouveau, marked by dreamlike compositions and a preoccupation with mortality, disease, and the supernatural. Active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, he created paintings and sculptural works that often featured allegorical figures, particularly skeletal or spectral forms emerging from darkened landscapes. His formal training and engagement with European modernist currents produced a distinctive visual language combining Nordic melancholy with fin-de-siècle aesthetics. Simberg's relatively brief career, ending with his death in 1917, left a concentrated body of work that remains central to Finnish Symbolism.

Source: Wikidata · Trust score: 40% · Updated 1mo ago

Graph relationships

Taste overlap and adjacency

Movement
Art Nouveau
Medium
Painting
Related Artists
12 in graph
Canonical record

Artworks (33)

View all 33 artworks →

Artwork sources (1)

33 published of 33 catalogued · 33 with image
  • Wikidata
    33 published33 img

Per-Artwork Provenance Chains (top 10)

50 entries · 1 sources
  • Marie von Heiroth
    1904 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • Spring Feeling
    1895 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • Spring Evening During the Break-Up of the Ice
    1897 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • The Garden of Death
    1896 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • Death and the Peasant
    1895 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • On the Shore
    1910 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • Self-Portrait
    1907 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • The Wounded Angel
    1903 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • Auntie; The Artist's Aunt
    1898 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
  • Frost
    1895 · Wikidata · 5 prov
    Wikidata·titleWikidata·mediumWikidata·year_createdWikidata·primary_image_urlWikidata·artwork_type
Record

Images

Hugo Simberg (Wikipedia)
Wikipedia
Emiliano and Eufemio Zapata with their Wives (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago
Emiliano and Eufemio Zapata with their Wives (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago

Relationships

2
Record

Exhibitions and timeline

No exhibitions or timeline entries yet