| He
slams the door at the City Hall…
In 1921, having still not digested the dispute with
Swedish critics two years before, Dick Beer is encouraged by his friends
to enter a frescos competition intended for the brand new Stockholm
City Hall (made in red brick and partly inspired by a Venice Renaissance
palace). His proposals painted in gouache (“the
Queen of the Mälar lake” among others) are not accepted
but in 1973 professor Sten Karling talks about an important artistic
step:
“With a course similar to
the one taken by Dunoyer de Segonzac and where it is also apparent that
Dick Beer retained something definitive from his cubist studies, the
artist’s fresco proposals for the City Hall display a powerful
originality, with imposing sculptural figures sitting with the map of
the city in the background.”
In reality the artist had already begun
a collaboration with the City Hall, but in full execution he his reported
to have a violent quarrel with the famous chief architect Ragnar
Östberg, slams the door and travels to Menton !
(Continued)
|