Landscape: Grey and Pink, 1979 Acrylic on canvas, 54 x 30"
Evening View, 1964, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 40"
Blue View, 1974, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 60"
Landscape Grey Pink
Evening View - SOLD
Blue View
 
Landscape Grey Pink
Evening View - SOLD
Blue View
previous arrow
next arrow

Artist CV

About

Born: 1908 Chicago, Illinois
Died:  1999 Los Angeles, California
Studied: Pasadena Junior College, Pasadena, California and Stickney Memorial School of Art, Pasadena, California

My work has been concerned, in varying modes of pictorial structure and various degrees of representation and abstraction, with the effort to embody, and to evoke, states of mind, moods and emotions.” – Helen Lundeberg

Helen Lundeberg was born in Chicago and moved to Pasadena, California, with her family in 1912.  She was a gifted child and as a young adult was inclined to become a writer.  However, after taking an art class taught by Feitelson at the Stickney Memorial School of Art in Pasadena, Lundeberg was inspired to pursue a career as an artist.

Along with Lorser Feitelson in 1934, Lundeberg founded Subjective Classicism, better known as Post Surrealism.  Unlike European Surrealism, Post Surrealism did not rely on random dream imagery.  Instead, carefully planned subjects were used to guide the viewer through the painting, gradually revealing a deeper meaning.  This method appealed to Lundeberg’s highly intellectual sensibilities.

Themes of Post Surrealism continued in Lundeberg’s paintings until the 1950s, when she began to explore geometric abstraction.  Always based in reality, Lundeberg created mysterious images that exist somewhere between abstraction and figuration.  In the 1960s and 1970s, Lundeberg continued her journey through abstraction, exploring imagery associated with landscapes, interiors, still-life, planetary forms and intuitive compositions she called enigmas.  In the 1980s, Lundeberg created her final body of work – a confident series of paintings that deal with landscapes and architectural elements.

Helen Lundeberg’s works are included in the permanent collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institute, Washington D.C., the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and numerous other public and private collections.