BARON ARILD ROSENKRANTZ (1870-1964)
Biography
Symboliste, World (founded 1886)
Fredens Temple
(Denmark,
1943)
Sold
Oil on canvas
Signed and dated lower left
Dimensions:
99.50cm wide
75.50cm high
(39.17 inches wide 29.72 inches high)
Provenance:
Private collection
Description / Expertise
Fredens Temple was on show at the Rosenholm Castle in Jutland in 1943.
Arild Rosenkrantz was throughout his life a ‘spiritual seeker’, his life reaching the peak of his spirituality in 1912 when he met Rudolf Steiner, the creator of ‘Anthroposophy’, the connection of human understanding with the spiritual world.
Born in Fredriksborg in Denmark, son of the Danish minister to Italy, Rosenkranz trained at the Académie Julian in Paris. In 1888 he was introduced by his mother to the French writer, art critic and mystic, Joséphin Péladan. In the years 1892-1895 he exhibited at Péladan’s Symbolist ‘Salon de la Rose et Croix’ in Paris. Joséphin Péladan had set about bringing together all the young Symbolistes painters in Europe and his speech at the launch of the Salon in 1892, declared: Artists who believe in Leonardo and The Victory of Samothrace, you will be the Rose + Croix. Our aim is to tear love out of the western soul and replace it with the love of Beauty, the love of the Idea, the love of Mystery. We will combine in harmonious ecstasy the emotions of literature, the Louvre and Bayreuth.
After a year in the United States in 1896, where Rosenkrantz had worked with stained glass at the Tiffany Studios, he moved to London and there he established himself as a spiritual artist. In London his work came strongly under the influence of Burne-Jones, and he showed work in the final exhibitions of the New Gallery which had been the favoured gallery of Burne-Jones and his followers in the 1890’s and which closed in 1909. He had many commissions including twelve large panels for the ceiling in the dining room at Claridges Hotel, London, and made stained glass windows and bronze sculptures for a number of English churches and castles. He also illustrated the Danish edition of Edgar Allen Poe’s “Tales of Mystery Adventure” and many other literary works.
In 1914 Rosenkrantz joined the artists working with Rudolf Steiner to create the first Goetheanum in Dornach, Switzerland. Here he worked with other artists on the decoration of the small cupola, and through Steiner’s influence his style of painting completely changed. In 1922-23 Rosencrantz produced large pastel drawing’s of The Seven Seals which were an interpretation of the Seals as explained by Rudolf Steiner in “Occult Seals and Columns” (1907). These drawings were executed under the guidance of Rudolf Steiner for a portfolio edition, published in England with black and white illustrations (1924).
Major decorative works included The Omnipresent, a sculptured war memorial at St George’s Church, Camberwell, which he executed in 1918, and stained glass at Taplow, Berkeley Castle, St Paul'’s church, Onslow Gardens and other locations. Subsequently he exhibited work at the Abbey Gallery, the Beaux Arts Gallery, the Baillie Gallery and above all Cooling and Sons’ Gallery where he had annual exhibitions in the 1930’s. His last recorded exhibition was at Cooling’s in 1939. He also had works accepted at exhibitions at the Royal Academy of Art in Copenhagen and the Guildhall in London.
Celebrating his seventieth birthday in Denmark in 1940, Rosenkrantz was forced to stay because of the unexpected German occupation. He was invited to stay at the family castle Rosenholm, in Jutland, where he continued to work spending his last years painting, lecturing and writing in his native country. He left a collection of his paintings to be exhibited at Rosenholm Castle, which can still be viewed to this day.
Arild Rosenkrantz died in 1964. He left a collection of his paintings to be exhibited at Rosenholm Castle, which can still be viewed to this day.