{"id":3333,"date":"2015-10-01T12:01:00","date_gmt":"2015-10-01T10:01:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/the-barber-painter-john-christensen-a-cult-figure-on-the-interwar-art-scene\/"},"modified":"2023-05-01T09:31:59","modified_gmt":"2023-05-01T07:31:59","slug":"the-barber-painter-john-christensen-a-cult-figure-on-the-interwar-art-scene","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/the-barber-painter-john-christensen-a-cult-figure-on-the-interwar-art-scene\/","title":{"rendered":"\u201cThe Barber Painter\u201d: John Christensen \u2013 a cult figure on the interwar art scene"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>In 2011 Statens Museum for Kunst (the SMK) acquired Circus Artists in the Ring, 1932, thereby making it the fourth painting by John Christensen to enter the museum\u2019s collections. The first, Snow-Clearing from 1933, was received as a donation in 1940, whereas the other two, A Lady Wearing a Hat. The Artist\u2019s Wife, Dagny Marie Christensen from 1935 and Self-Portrait from 1936, were purchased in the 1980s. The museum collection also encompasses thirty-nine of Christensen\u2019s works on paper; the first such purchase was made in 1932, the most recent in 2002. All of these works are almost permanently in storage, as are the more than 150 other works by this artist owned by various Danish museums.<sup id=\"footnote-1\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"1\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"At the time of writing this article, only one museum-owned work by John C. was on public display: Fyns Kunstmuseum\u2019s 2010 acquisition Still life (Apples on a Dish), which is assumed to be an early work, partly due to the still life motif and due to its provenance, linking it to the collection of Max M\u00fcller. \"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Yet even though the museums keep his work stowed away, the name John Christensen is not unknown by the public. It rings a bell with many people \u2013 especially if you add the moniker \u2018The Barber Painter\u2019. Over the years the artist has been the subject of numerous journalistic articles, often focusing on the colourful circle of characters that surrounded his barbershop in Kapelvej in the N\u00f8rrebro area of Copenhagen where he found much of his subject matter. In 1987 he was even the subject of a new play.<sup id=\"footnote-2\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"2\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Lean Nielsen and Henning Mortensen\u2019s Rabarberblues (Rhubarb Blues), performed by the theatre ensemble Natholdet (Night Shift) at K\u00f8benhavneren in 1987; examples of journalistic treatments of the scene surrounding the barbershop include: Anne-Mette Gregersen: \u201cBarber-maleren\u201d, Det fri Aktuelt 22 July 1987; Lars Ole Knippel: \u201cBarbermaleren p\u00e5 Kapelvej\u201d, Jyllands-Posten 21 July 2012.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">2<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0However, in art history he is largely consigned to footnote status;<sup id=\"footnote-3\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"3\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"He is, however, heralded as the founding father of Na\u00efve art in Denmark in the specialised literature that writes about Na\u00efve art as the story of \u201cna\u00efve dream images of a life we all wish we could lead\u201d, cf. Lindboe, Ole (2003): Smukt som uskyld \u2013 danske naivister, p. 7, a reading that does not do his body of work justice; see also Schade, Virtus (1957): \u201cNaivisme. Retning og kunstnere\u201d, in: Kunst 8, vol. 4., p. 203-221.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">3<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0reference works about the 1930s \u2013 which are usually constructed as narratives about the irreconcilable opposing forces of avant-garde art (or modernism) versus tradition \u2013 leave him floating without any firm context, possibly as a footnote associated with the Corner tradition, and often in connection with the concept of \u2018hjemstavnsmaleriet\u2019 \u2013 paintings of home, hearth and one\u2019s immediate surroundings.<sup id=\"footnote-4\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"4\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"J\u00f8rgensen, Henning and Villads Villadsen (1995): Tradition og surrealisme (Ny dansk kunsthistorie, vol. 7), p. 87.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">4<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The objective of the present article is to analyse how the barber John Christensen (hereinafter John C.) became part of the art scene of his day: to chart the process that, within the span of just a few years, transformed this barber into an artist of almost cult-like status, celebrated by critics from every camp and compared, upon his death in 1940, to great figures of art history such as van Gogh, Chagall and <em>le Douanier<\/em> (the customs officer) Rousseau.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 968px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig1_john_c_smk_kms8630.jpg\" width=\"968\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig.1.\u00a0<\/strong>John Christensen: <em>Circus Artists in the Ring<\/em>. 1932. Oil on cardboard. 63.5 x 57,9 cm. Statens Museum for Kunst, inv.no. KMS8630. Photo:\u00a0SMK Foto.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>More than seventy years have passed since John C. died. Almost all eyewitnesses and fellow artists are now gone,<sup id=\"footnote-5\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"5\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"An interview held on 6 September 2011 with former publisher Jarl Borgen, who as a very young man visited the artist in his barbershop and bought several works from him, is the only eyewitness account that this project has been able to secure; an interview conducted on 27 February 2015 with Mulle Nash J\u00f8rgensen (formerly Mulle Nording) provided information about one of John C.\u2019s solo shows that took place in the interviewee\u2019s art gallery, Nordings Kunsthandel, in Nyhavn, Copenhagen, in 1937. I wish to extend my warm thanks to both for their interest in this project.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">5<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and apart from a single binder of cuttings we have no archive pertaining to his work, nor indeed any major primary materials apart from the works of art themselves.<sup id=\"footnote-6\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"6\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The folder of cuttings was discovered at one of John C.\u2019s great-grandchildren, who very generously made it available for this project; warm thanks are due to the family and to art dealer Finn Korzen for their great helpfulness; the latter also shared his information about privately owned works.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">6<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In order to analyse the process that made John C. an artist it is, then, necessary to take one\u2019s point of departure in materials and information from people associated with him, who can shed light on his sales and alliances, and in printed materials that can tell us about his exhibition activity and reception. Particular emphasis will be placed on the questions of who bought works from the artist, thereby supporting his work, how and for what reasons he was presented to wider audiences, and what agendas the various stakeholders had.<sup id=\"footnote-7\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"7\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The fact that it is even possible to trace early buyers is primarily due to materials found among Erik Zahle\u2019s papers at The Royal Danish Library (Det Kgl. Bibliotek (KB), Tilg. 527, which takes the form of lists prepared in connection with the planning of the memorial exhibition at Kunstforeningen in 1940, supplemented by Kunstforeningen\u2019s hand-written inventory and materials from Vagn Nielsen\u2019s documentary archive at Arbejdermuseet (ABM), collected by Vagn Nielsen in the 1940s.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">7<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The objective is to identify and present an overall context that will make it possible to consider the artist and his work in ways that are more meaningful than the simpler angle suggested in the above. <strong>[fig.1]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 898px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig2_john_c_randers_kunstmuseum_inv.0512-8.jpg\" width=\"898\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 2.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>Morning Sunlight in November. Tree-lined path in the Assistens Churcyard<\/em>. 1936. Oil on canvas. 65 x 56 cm. Randers Kunstmuseum, inv.no. 0512. Photo: Niels Erik H\u00f8ybye.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Let us begin by establishing certain facts about our featured artist: Born in 1896, John C. was the son of a tailor. He grew up in the St. Kongensgade neighbourhood of Copenhagen as the oldest in a flock of siblings that eventually counted twelve children. He attended the S\u00f8lvgades Skole, and having completed his compulsory military service he trained as a hairdresser in Haslev. Thus, it was hardly written in the stars that he would become a well-known figure on the Danish interwar art scene.<\/p>\n<p>In 1920 he acquired a barbershop in Roskilde, and in 1921 he married Dagny, a shop girl from the store where he bought his tobacco. In 1922 the newlyweds returned to Copenhagen, where John C. operated a barbershop in the basement of Kapelvej 7A in the N\u00f8rrebro area until 1937.<sup id=\"footnote-8\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"8\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"According to Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes from a conversation with Dagny C. on 27 October 1949, ABM, John\u2019s father had helped them get established with the barbershop in Roskilde, which they sold cheaply in order to return to the Copenhagen they both yearned for.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">8<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The family lived in a one-bedroom flat in the same building until 1935; at this point John C. received the Villiam H. Michaelsen grant and spent the money on moving to a garret flat in Fyensgade 4, still in the neighbourhood of N\u00f8rrebro and still overlooking the Assistens churchyard. In 1937, having received the Oluf Hartmann grant,<sup id=\"footnote-9\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"9\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The grant was awarded by a board of directors consisting of S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen, Povl Schr\u00f8der and Preben Wilmann.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">9<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0he bought a small holiday cottage in the village of Vridsl\u00f8semagle near Taastrup and sold his barbershop in order to devote himself entirely to his career as an artist. On 2 January 1940 he died of cancer after a relatively brief period of illness.<sup id=\"footnote-10\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"10\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"John C. left only a very limited trail of written material, such as a draft letter about the sale of the barbershop from 10 May 1937, found in a binder of cuttings owned by the family; besides references to encyclopaedias and censuses, the biographical data is primarily based on Uttenreitter, Poul (1940): John Christensen (Vor Tids Kunst no. 31), Nicolaisen, Henning (2000): Barbermaleren John Christensen, Formidlingscentret Assistens, and on interviews in the press.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">10<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The art critic Poul Uttenreitter, who wrote about John C. in the series\u00a0<em>Vor Tids Kunst<\/em>\u00a0(Art of Our Time) and also knew him personally, states that John C. began working as an artist around 1923. The claim is corroborated by the fact that the oldest known dated art work by John C. is a small crayon portrait of his daughter Mussi from 1924. The next year saw the creation of both drawn and painted still lifes. Tracing John C.\u2019s body of work becomes much easier from 1928 onwards, for by this time he exhibited his work prolifically \u2013 at the Kunstnernes Efter\u00e5rsudstilling (KE) (The Artists\u2019 Autumn Exhibition), at art dealers and as part of the artist group Koloristerne (The Colourists), of which he was a founding member in 1932 and headed as chairman from 1935 until he died.<sup id=\"footnote-11\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"11\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Aage Gitz-Johansen was the first chairman of Koloristerne and was introduced as such in the catalogue. John C.\u2019s chairmanship is not formally stated in the catalogues, but he is addressed and treated as such by the media from 1935 onwards, e.g. in Silvestre: \u201cVi er helst fri for Genier\u201d, Ekstrabladet 5 April 1935 and Sven: \u201cTolv yngre og en \u00e6ldre\u201d, Aftenbladet 3 May 1935.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">11<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Despite the brevity of his career John C. left behind an extensive body of work, most of which is scattered among private collectors, but fortunately for the purposes of this article many of these works are still owned by descendants of the collectors who originally acquired them.\u00a0<strong>[fig.2]<\/strong><\/p>\n<h2>Entering the art scene<\/h2>\n<p>Exactly what prompted John C. to decide to try to exhibit his art cannot be conclusively ascertained. He may have been encouraged to do so by artists who frequented his barbershop. We certainly know that he knew S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen at an early stage; Hjorth Nielsen painted John C.\u2019s portrait in 1928, and he was among the guests invited to the parties frequently held in the barber\u2019s home.<sup id=\"footnote-12\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"12\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The connection to S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen is documented in the form of a series of party invitations found among Hjorth Nielsen\u2019s cuttings, Museum Jorn, and by Hjorth Nielsen\u2019s Portrait of the painter John Christensen from 1928, cat. no. 18 at Kunstforeningen\u2019s Hjorth Nielsen exhibition in 1942.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">12<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0John C. himself pointed to Jens S\u00f8ndergaard as a role model. Their friendship may well have gone back a long way; indeed, S\u00f8ndergaard lived in N\u00f8rrebro for some time during the 1920s.<sup id=\"footnote-13\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"13\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The admiration for Jens S\u00f8ndergaard was expressed in e.g. the questionnaire that John C. filled in for Weilbachs Kunstnerleksikon (The Weilbach Lexicon of Artists) in the spring of 1930; Preben Wilmann also called John C. \u201cThe Jens S\u00f8ndergaard of the city\u201d in the press: \u201cKoloristerne\u201d, Social-Demokraten 16 December 1932.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">13<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>John C.\u2019s debut at the KE in 1928 \u2013 his entries included a self-portrait and two funeral scenes \u2013 did not attract much attention. However, in the years that followed he had a number of solo shows, and the press gradually began to take note and attend his exhibitions even though they took place at very humble venues. Given that John C.\u2019s \u2018emergence\u2019 took place during a time where discussions on social art, working-class art and democratisation accompanied much of what went on within the realms of culture, one might easily imagine that the workers\u2019 movement and far-left groupings were main forces behind the promotion and elevation of this barber, this autodidact artist from working-class roots. However, closer scrutiny of the contemporary reception of John C. paints a far more complex picture.<\/p>\n<p>The tabloid newspaper <em>B.T.<\/em> was among the first to call public attention to the artist. When, in March 1929, he exhibited his work in the then recently opened gallery Tj\u00f8rnelunds Kunsthandel in a basement in Gothersgade,<sup id=\"footnote-14\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"14\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Tj\u00f8rnelunds Kunsthandel was located in the basement of Gothersgade 103 and is mentioned as a new arrival on the art scene in Borchsenius, Kai: \u201cEfteraarets Separatudstillinger\u201d, Samleren, December 1928; the gallery is sometimes referred to as \u2018Ung Kunst\u2019; John C.\u2019s exhibition took place from 5 to 20 March 1929.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">14<\/a><\/sup> his work attracted the attention of the writer Anna Linck. The small exhibition consisted of paintings, drawings and watercolours depicting e.g. street scenes, funerals and circus motifs, and Anna Linck emphasised that John C. was an artist who had, despite vestiges and signs of inspiration from multiple sources, his very own, distinctive palette and grip on colour.<sup id=\"footnote-15\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"15\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"A.L.: John Christensen in \u201cUng Kunst\u201d, B.T. 12 March1929.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">15<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0One of the regular critics with <em>B.T.<\/em>, the painter O.V. Borch, was in attendance when John C. exhibited at Kinagaarden in the Vesterbro area of Copenhagen the following year. Unimpressed with John C.\u2019s technical skill, Borch recommended that he should improve himself by studying artists as widely different as Breughel and Chagall. The fact that Borch\u2019s verdict was nevertheless positive rested on three qualities: the artist\u2019s sense of humour, his natural gift for art, and his ability to convey entirely new subjects through the medium of art. In his summing up, he stated that: \u201cIn some paintings of the Kapelvej road with the Assistens churchyard in the background and the slow-moving Line 8 tram as the focal point of the picture he successfully conveys some of the distinctive, brooding sombreness and mouldy atmosphere that shrouds this peculiar neighbourhood.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-16\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"16\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Borch, O.V.: \u201cUng Maler\u201d, B.T. 30 May 1930. The exhibition venue, located in Vesterbrogade 70, is called \u201cJohansen og J\u00e6ger\u201d in other sources.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">16<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Note the use of words such as \u201cmouldy\u201d and \u201cpeculiar\u201d. As many later reports and statements will make clear, the Kapelvej neighbourhood was a world in which few of the main movers and shakers of the cultural scene of the time felt at home. <strong>[fig.3]<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1100px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter oversized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/02\/fig3_john_c_smk_kks1965_86_1.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1100\" height=\"833\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 3.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>Folk scene from Kapelvej<\/em>. 1932. Pencil, pen, brush, ink, watercolour on paper. 257 x 341 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, SMK, inv.no. KKS1965\u201386. Photo: SMK Foto.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2>The first sale<\/h2>\n<p>It is hardly possible to provide an exact answer to the question of who first bought a work of art from John C. The fact that names of private owners of certain paintings appear all the way back to his first solo show does not necessarily mean that those works were sold to them. The engraver Max M\u00fcller claims to have been the first to buy from John C. \u2013 apart from an art dealer that we can only assume was Henning Larsen.<sup id=\"footnote-17\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"17\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes from M\u00fcller\u2019s visit, 14 August 1949, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">17<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0However, M\u00fcller may have to share that distinction with not only Larsen, but also with a bicycle courier called Robert Jacobsen. Yes, indeed: that messenger boy was none other than the Robert Jacobsen who went on to become a famous sculptor, known as \u201cThe Great Robert\u201d, but neither he nor John C. would have had any inkling of the greatness that laid in wait for him when they first became acquainted in the early 1930s. Some years would still go by before a young Jacobsen began experimenting with sculptures made out of wood and scrap iron back in his parents\u2019 basement, and almost ten years would pass before Jacobsen had his first exhibition.<sup id=\"footnote-18\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"18\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Robert Jacobsen\u2019s childhood home, which was at the address Maribovej from 1932 onwards, was very much shaped by his mother\u2019s penchant for collecting, and Robert\u2019s friends were always welcome. At one point works by e.g. S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen and John C. were hung on the walls; these would later be joined by art by Asger Jorn and Henry Heerup, cf. Mentze, Ernst (1961): Robert Jacobsen. En dansk kunstner i fremmed milieu, pp. 51-52.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">18<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0At the time of John C.\u2019s death Robert Jacobsen owned at least six works by him \u2013 an early oil and five watercolours<sup id=\"footnote-19\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"19\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"According to lists found among Erik Zahle\u2019s papers.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">19<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0&#8211; but many more had passed through his hands. Robert Jacobsen has later related how he collected a number of paintings by S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen, Victor Brockdorff and John C. while living at his parents\u2019 home back in the early 1930s \u2013 his objective was to sell the paintings on in the second-hand shop he ran with his mother, but these art dealings did not yield the financial results he had hoped for.<sup id=\"footnote-20\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"20\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Mentze (1961), pp. 72-74; an undated advertisement discovered in Hjorth Nielsen\u2019s binder of cuttings at Museum Jorn corroborates this.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">20<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>As a young errand boy, Robert Jacobsen happened to pass by Henning Larsen\u2019s gallery (Henning Larsens Kunsthandel), which was housed in modest premises in Vognmagergade, and he grew fascinated with the motley crew that gathered there to play cards and discuss art. The group included S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen, Karl Bovin, Kaj Ejstrup, Eug\u00e8ne de Sala, Helmuth Thomsen and Max M\u00fcller. Robert Jacobsen befriended Max M\u00fcller, who was around the same age, and when John C. had an exhibition at Larsen\u2019s gallery in 1931 he helped type up the catalogue inventory. However, Jacobsen\u2019s most vivid memory of that event concerned the unconventional method of presentation: the pictures were hung so close together that they covered all the surfaces of the entire room \u2013 walls and ceiling alike. He recalled that the cost of a good drawing by John C. was around a couple of kroner, or could be acquired for a sandwich.<sup id=\"footnote-21\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"21\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Mentze (1961), pp. 62, 69\u201370.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">21<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Robert Jacobsen shared his memories of the time with the journalist Ernst Mentze in 1961, many years after the events took place, but his statements are corroborated by other sources, and there can be no doubt that early buyers got their John C. works at very low prices. In an interview with Henning Larsen conducted by collector Vagn Nielsen in 1949, the exhibition in the summer of 1931 was described as follows:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cHL also stated that this exhibition, which had been staged in a space smaller than any of the rooms found in the gallery\u2019s current address in Kompagnistr\u00e6de, had featured so many drawings that he and John hung them on the ceiling, too. Then they put in a large armchair that visitors could recline in to look at the pictures. HL took over 200 drawings after this exhibition, and in order to help John he gave many of them away to special customers and sold the rest at five or ten kroner apiece.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-22\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"22\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes from a conversation with Henning Larsen 20 October 1949, ABM; Henning Larsens Kunsthandel is referred to as new in Samleren in August 1931, which means that John C.\u2019s exhibition from 6 June to 1 July 1931 must have been one of the first to be staged at the gallery; reviewed in B.T. 24 June 1931; hand-drawn catalogue cover at ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">22<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Max M\u00fcller himself stated that he paid DKK 10 for the painting <em>Audience <\/em>from 1931 and DKK 15 for <em>The Performer\u2019s Box;<\/em> supposedly prices from the higher spectrum of the scale,<sup id=\"footnote-23\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"23\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes from a conversation with Max M\u00fcller 14 August 1949, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">23<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0whereas Henning Larsen\u2019s prices were generally even lower: \u201cHenning Larsen bought 200 pictures by John C. in exchange for some old furniture; he sold the drawings at 0.50 kroner a piece. He took the pictures out of their frames in order to make them easier to sell. Robert Jacobsen bought at this price.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-24\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"24\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes \u201cMax M\u00fcller. Ord om John C.\u201d 13 September 1948, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">24<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This is to say that Max M\u00fcller was among the first to buy art by John C., apart from the art dealer himself, and all available evidence suggests that he was the first to establish a proper John C. collection; this eventually numbered more than forty works that he hung from floor to ceiling in his room in his parents\u2019 house.<sup id=\"footnote-25\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"25\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The main source of documentation concerning this collection is photographs from their home; these show approximately 40 works, but there may have been more. Photographs survive in Vagn Nielsen\u2019s archives, ABM, and among the descendants of Max M\u00fcller, whom I should like to thank for their great helpfulness. Thirteen works from M\u00fcller\u2019s collection were put up for sale at the Kunsthallen auction on 17\u201318 January 1945; the information on the low prices also appears in Fonnesbech-Sandberg, Elna (1945): Dem jeg m\u00f8dte, p. 44; she mentions that John C. sold nothing and left works with Larsen, who then sold them at quite ridiculous prices. In her narration this is linked to a certain sense of bitterness directed at the art dealer.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">25<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>The painting barber<\/h2>\n<p>The early exhibitions made no mention of the fact that the artist was a barber, or that his artistic endeavours took a barbershop as its point of departure. So it was not this fact that prompted interest among critics, nor did it pervade how they perceived and understood his work. This would all change over the course of 1932.<\/p>\n<p>The first step was taken by Preben Wilmann, a critic with the newspaper <em>Social-Demokraten, <\/em>in connection with a solo show at Kinagaarden in the spring of 1932. Wilmann set up an interview with the artist, during which he pursued two parallel courses of inquiry. One of these focused on the issue of being an artist who works in a working-class neighbourhood and portrays that context in his art. Part of the interview describes the wealth of distinctive people and events that could be found in that neighbourhood, but it also addresses the artist\u2019s relationship with the working class as an audience \u2013 and about the fact that John C. prized them above more affluent art lovers. <strong>[fig.4]\u00a0<\/strong>The other main focus of Wilmann\u2019s interview is the question of how the artist\u2019s ideas arise out of his barbershop and his immediate surroundings; how the intervals between clients allow him time to pause, look out the window and draw the wealth of potential subjects that parade past his shop. At the same time, the barbershop is presented as a meeting place and favourite haunt of artists; John C. himself says: \u201cI have some great friends among the painters; they come to my barbershop, and then we discuss art until we\u2019re blue in the face.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One of the key reasons why Wilmann set up this interview was the fact that John C.\u2019s art had its roots in the city and was an example of \u201ccontemporary, vibrant, realistic urban art\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-26\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"26\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"pr.: \u201cDen malende Barber paa Kapelvej\u201d, Social-Demokraten 15 April 1932; from this point on Wilmann would always state that his first personal meeting and his first interview with John C. took place in 1931, for example in his introduction in the catalogue John Christensen. Mindeudstilling i Anledning af 50 Aaret for Kunstnerens F\u00f8dsel, 25 April \u2013 12 May 1946 (also printed in Social-Demokraten 29 April 1946); however, this claim is unlikely to be true given that all the statements referred to here can be found in the 1932 interview.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">26<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Preben Wilmann was originally a painter, studying under William Scharff first, followed by Pedro Ara\u00fajo in Paris, but from 1920 onwards he also worked as a journalist for <em>Social-Demokraten<\/em>; for him, this endeavour would gradually eclipse painting as a career. During the 1930s he was a high-profile writer on art, known for his Marxist views, and his critique often constituted contributions to the ongoing discussion on \u2018working-class art\u2019 that infused much of the left wing during the interwar years, a time when many believed that art should and would play an important part in recreating society by being overtly political.<sup id=\"footnote-27\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"27\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The radical left-wing group Monde contributed to the public discussion in several ways, and in 1930 they published a Danish edition of the German playwright Friedrich Wolf\u2019s book Kunst is Waffe (in Danish Kunst er Kamp, literally \u2018Art is Struggle\u2019); the ideas presented in this book would influence Danish political thinking far into the ranks of the Social Democrats, but drew protests from the cultural radicals, including Poul Henningsen.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">27<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 581px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig4_john_c_abm_abm1245x8_cropped.jpg\" width=\"581\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 4.<\/strong>\u00a0John Christensen: <em>Self-portrait with palette<\/em>. 1931. Pen, ink on paper. 283 x 146 mm. The Workers\u2019 Museum, Copenhagen, inv.no. 1245&#215;8.Photo: Thomas Meldgaard.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>However, this perception of workers\u2019 art soon came under pressure within the Danish Social Democratic Party (Socialdemokratiet), as expressed by Julius Bomholt in his book <em>Arbejderkultur <\/em>(Working Class Culture), 1932: instead of critical, polemical, belligerent art this book called for a positive vein of art suited to a proletariat on the rise; a kind of art that reflected the movement\u2019s ever-growing power and position in society.<\/p>\n<p>Preben Wilmann engaged in similar thoughts, and in the 1930s he operated on the basis of a dual agenda: partly to \u2018update\u2019 the workers\u2019 movement\u2019s understanding and appreciation of contemporary art, and partly to prompt artistic innovation based on inspiration from the workers\u2019 world. This agenda can be clearly felt in his reception of John C.<sup id=\"footnote-28\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"28\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Wilmann, Preben (1934): Dansk Kunst (Danish Art) was presented as pendants to Julius Bomholt\u2019s two books Dansk Digtning (Danish Poetry) from 1930 and Arbejderkultur (Working Class Culture) from 1932, which is to say that the book sought to provide an overall Marxist perception of culture, specifically the visual arts; art was not primarily regarded as a means of propaganda associated with the movement\u2019s political struggles; rather, it was regarded as a vehicle for education and enlightenment; Wilmann wanted to present art to the workers and to urge them, as active users and consumers of art, to affect the current main tendencies in art; cf. Wilmann, Preben: \u201cKammeraterne\u201d, Social-Demokraten 7 November 1935.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">28<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In addition to the two main themes of Wilmann\u2019s interview it is also worth pointing out how he introduced a narrative that came to be important to the general view and reception of John C: the narrative about the importance of the churchyard as an existential sounding board for the work, as illustrated by the story of the shock of putting one\u2019s head down into an open grave on a lovely summer\u2019s day. Wilmann\u2019s depiction of John C. came to form the basis for much of the subsequent reception, and he also laid down the foundations for a range of anecdotes that only improved with age, being gradually expanded on and embellished by colourful variations.<sup id=\"footnote-29\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"29\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"In some cases Wilmann would embellish his stories himself, for example the story of the open grave: the 1932 version was repeated with a wealth of supplementary colourful details in 1946, supposedly still based on his memory of the 1932 interview, see Wilmann (1946).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">29<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>Where soap foams for the sake of art<\/h2>\n<p>The interview took place at the offices of <em>Social-Demokraten<\/em>, where Wilmann had arranged to meet the artist.<sup id=\"footnote-30\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"30\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Wilmann (1946) relates that John C. marked the occasion by putting on his best clothes and bringing his wife Dagny along.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">30<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0When the artist group Koloristerne held their first exhibition in Copenhagen towards the end of 1932, new facets were added to the barber-artist persona by Christian Houmark, a seasoned journalist with the popular tabloid <em>B.T.<\/em>, who used this occasion to conduct an interview with the zingy headline \u201cWhere soap foams for the sake of art\u201d. The setting for this interview was not a newspaper office, but the barbershop in Kapelvej 7A, and from this point on the shop became an almost inescapable part of the context of John C.\u2019s work. In Houmark\u2019s piece the barbershop was presented with great emphasis on its plain, unassuming, but fascinating down-to-earth qualities, which are evoked through references to the \u201csup of beer\u201d that the interviewer and artist partake of while customers flit in and out, perhaps on their way to a funeral or to \u201cFat Carl\u201d, the publican of a nearby establishment in order to drown their sorrows. Houmark conveys the impression of a constant throng of people that eventually forces John C. to pin a note on the door and retreat to the back room in order to be able to complete the interview. This introduces us to the back room, where his works are kept, a small space opening up on the inner courtyard. <strong>[fig.5]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The interview was accompanied by a photograph showing the artist at work as a barber. John C. used the photograph as the basis for a drawing that was subsequently often reproduced in articles and on catalogue covers; it was even used as a poster. That image undoubtedly helped to firmly establish the barbershop and the barber\u2019s craft as a context for the artist\u2019s work. Houmark also offered other material to supplement Wilmann\u2019s anecdote about John C.\u2019s interest in death, adding a new layer to the theme: his grief over the death of a younger brother. The barber\u2019s \u2018bourgeois\u2019 family life \u2013 a topic that Wilmann had already touched upon \u2013 was now further expanded on as Houmark emphasised Johns C.\u2019s strong admiration and affection for his wife, who represents \u201cLife\u2019s true timbre of Love.\u201d Finally, Houmark emphasised the autodidact aspect of the artist\u2019s work, allowing the artist to express the significance of being self-taught in his own words:<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1224px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig5_john_c_bt1932.jpg\" width=\"1224\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 5.<\/strong>\u00a0The opening of Christian Houmark\u2019s interview in B.T. 9 December 1932.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>\u201d[\u2026] \u2018What pleases me most is the fact that I never learned how to paint; the Academy ruins the young, that\u2019s what I think. Of course we need technique, but first and foremost we must be our own, personal selves [\u2026] no, indeed, I am Nature first and in all things, paying no heed to fashions [ \u2026]\u2019.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-31\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"31\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Houmark, Christian: \u201cHvor S\u00e6ben skummer for Kunstens Skyld\u201d, B.T. 9 December 1932.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">31<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>With this, the key features of the popular reception of John C. were firmly in place. Over time, the themes would be accentuated further: the multitudes of local characters coming and going, and the barber\u2019s work as an inspirational setting for the artist\u2019s creativity. Many variations are spun on the theme of the informal amiability that pervades the barbershop, a place where everyone is on a first-name basis, and where immediacy is respected while academic airs are reviled.\u00a0<strong>[fig.6]<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 702px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig6_john_c_bymuseet_1976_0.jpg\" width=\"702\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 6.<\/strong> The catalogue for the exhibition at The Museum of Copenhagen, 1976, featuring John Christensen\u2019s drawing <em>Self-portrait<\/em> in the barbershop from 1936 on the cover. The drawing is in private ownership.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Certain aspects would receive particular attention at various points in time; for example, in the second half of the 1930s emphasis was placed on the bourgeois lifestyle that characterised John C. as a private individual: he tends to his business, wears polished boots every day, enjoys his Sunday roast; he is firmly anchored where so many other artists are unmoored. This distinctive identity may serve to set him apart from the many workers in his neighbourhood, but it also, and perhaps more importantly, sets him apart from the bohemian image attributed to other young artists of the day, including Hans Scherfig, Hjorth Nielsen and Aage Gitz-Johansen.<\/p>\n<p>However, even as John C. was described as an anti-bohemian person, his entire neighbourhood was gradually ascribed bohemian traits. N\u00f8rrebro became the Paris of Copenhagen, a point that was emphasised by journalists and by John C. himself \u2013 for example in a 1935 interview conducted by Dr. Rank from the tabloid newspaper\u00a0<em>Ekstrabladet<\/em>, who reported on the state of affairs \u201cout in Kapelvej\u201d, where he met the artist early one morning. John C. counted his blessings to be working as a barber; a profession that allowed him to meet so many people: \u201d[\u2026] I\u00a0<em>love\u00a0<\/em>people,\u00a0<em>all\u00a0<\/em>people, but especially the people of N\u00f8rrebro \u2013 there are ever so many wonderful characters amongst them!\u00a0<em>N\u00f8rrebro is the Paris of Copenhagen, mark my words! I shall never leave.<\/em>\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-32\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"32\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Dr. Rank: \u201cHos Barberen, som maler\u201d, Ekstrabladet 9 January 1935.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">32<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In 1936 the newspaper\u00a0<em>Berlingske Aftenavis<\/em>\u00a0paid a visit to \u201cThe Colourist John Christensen, N\u00f8rrebro\u2019s Parisian interpreter\u201d and saw the magic being made:\u00a0\u201cIn a small basement room, behind yellow curtains before the windows, paintings hang between mirrors, and next to a soap dish the artist\u2019s palette glistens and shimmers with colour. Strange paintings: expressive, grotesque; granite and gutters transformed into scenes worthy of the Arabian Nights.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-33\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"33\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"nls.: \u201dBarberen, der f\u00f8rer Penslen lige saa mesterligt som Kniven\u201d, Berlingske Aften 11 April 1936.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">33<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>It would seem that the cultural establishment regarded John C.\u2019s neighbourhood as alien territory, frightening and fascinating in equal measure, a potential destination for an \u201cexpedition.\u201d As the writer Jacob Paludan put it, a walk around N\u00f8rrebro may make you:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201close yourself in districts reminiscent of those that other large cities parade as dwellings for those who regard suspensions of payment as an everyday event. In such places one finds far too many second-hand stores with far too many neat second-hand clothes hanging outside. Hard bargains are being struck here; behind walls like these the coverlet on the poor man\u2019s bed has been haggled over. But these streets are also home to antiques shops with window displays of blue commemorative plates \u2013 Christmas of 1907 \u2013 violins and samovars [\u2026.]\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-34\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"34\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Jacob Paludan\u2019s text \u201cLangs s\u00f8erne\u201d from 1934 (quoted after Jacob Paludan. Et udvalg ved Hakon Stangerup, 1951, p. 111-112), is pointed out by Uttenreitter (1940), quoting another section on pp. 3-4; Jacob Paludan owned the John C. painting A small grave in the snow from 1936.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">34<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Poul Uttenreitter, who would later become John C.\u2019s biographer, was also somewhat falteringly hesitant when he took his first steps onto the working-class streets of N\u00f8rrebro, but was soon introduced to \u2018the natives\u2019 and their ways of life by John C., who had to show Uttenreitter that the images from his art \u2013 such as the marvellous second-hand shops and distinctive characters such as the old lady walking in the street while holding a birdcage\u00a0\u2013 actually existed in real life.<sup id=\"footnote-35\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"35\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes from a conversation with Dagny C. 4 November 1949, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">35<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>Institutional seal of approval<\/h2>\n<p>John C. got his first seal of institutional approval as early as 1932. The SMK made its first purchase of his art at the Koloristerne exhibition that year, acquiring four works for the Royal Collection of Graphic Art: two sketch portraits of Dagny executed using daring angles and cropping, and two drawings of scenes from Kapelvej: the atmospheric <em>Trees by the churchyard wall at Kapelvej (fog)<\/em> and <em>A funeral procession passing by my window <\/em>from 1931.<sup id=\"footnote-36\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"36\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"According to its inscription, the drawing should by rights have been called The Windowsill.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">36<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The latter is characterised by its sheer joy in storytelling and a subtle, gentle sense of humour that is characteristic for much of John C.\u2019s work, as well as by having unbroken lines that vary greatly in thickness \u2013 a feature of many of his best drawings \u2013 and a somewhat crooked perspective. Finally, here we also find some of the characters that were a recurring trait of his folk scenes, such as members of funeral processions and a pipe-smoking man. The street scene has been drawn as if it were observed through the window of his flat, viewed partly through curtains and a goldfish bowl, and John C.\u2019s pipe, which became something of a signature for him, occupies a prominent position on the windowsill in the foreground. <strong>[fig.7]<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1068px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig7_john_c_smk_kks12511.jpg\" width=\"1068\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 7.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>A funeral procession passing by my window<\/em>. 1931. Pen, ink on paper. 216 x 204 mm.The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, SMK, inv.no. KKS 12511. Photo: SMK Foto.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>We have seen, then, that SMK noticed John C.\u2019s art at an early stage; this is also evident from the fact that he was awarded the Villiam H. Michaelsen grant. SMK director Leo Swane was in charge of selecting grant recipients, so when the 1935 grant went to John C., Vilhelm Lundstr\u00f8m and Kay Christensen \u2013 and the draughtsmen\u2019s associations found it problematic that a grant dedicated specifically to draughtsmen was awarded to three artists who all had painting as their main field of operation \u2013 Swane was obliged to publicly explain the reasons behind this choice. He offered the following explanation concerning John C.:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cThe third artist, John Christensen, known as The Painter-Barber because his profession as a barber is his main source of income, I have followed for several years, repeatedly viewing his talented drawings at Kunstnernes Efteraarsudstilling at the \u2018Den Frie\u2019 exhibition venue. At the book exhibition at Kunstindustrimuseet (now Designmuseum Danmark) I noted John Christensen\u2019s Wessel illustrations with great interest, deeming them the very best there.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-37\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"37\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"-s.: \u201cStort Tegnerlegat til tre Kunstnere\u201d, Politiken 9 January 1935; comments on the draughtsmen\u2019s organisations\u2019 dissatisfaction with the fact that their members were not given priority for this grant can be found in e.g.: von H\u00f6rensagen: \u201dTegnervrede\u201d, Social-Demokraten 11 January 1935; Hansen, Anton (on behalf of Grafisk Kunstnersamfund) and Carl Jensen (on behalf of Danske Bladtegnere): \u201cTegner-Protest mod Legat-Uddeling\u201d, Social-Demokraten 12 January 1935; tp.: \u201cTegner-Protesten\u201d, Social-Demokraten 13 January 1935; the fact that the protests did not concern the question of John C.\u2019s ability as a draughtsman was evident in the Danish draughtsmen\u2019s association journal Tegneren vol.3, no. 3 (June 1935), which included an article called \u201cJohn Christensens Tegninger\u201d written by the pen name L-n.; the final words in this piece was \u201cHan fortjente Legatet\u201d (\u201cHe deserved the grant\u201d); the book exhibition described was the exhibition Moderne Bogillustration at Kunstindustrimuseet in 1934, which was preceded by a competition calling for illustrations for the poems of J.H. Wessel, which was won by Mogens Lorentzen; a number of young artists were also urged to illustrate a passage from Tom Kristensen\u2019s novel En anden (Another); John C. participated in both events, but sadly the Royal Collection of Graphic Art did not acquire any of the Wessel illustrations; proposals for illustrations for the Tom Kristensen novel are reproduced in the exhibition catalogue.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">37<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>That same year, another three works were purchased for the Royal Collection of Graphic Art at the Koloristerne exhibition: two quite traditional portraits of children and a watercolour,<em> Quiet Morning by the Wall<\/em>.<sup id=\"footnote-38\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"38\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The acquisition was given brief mentions in Social-Demokraten 5 May 1935 and in Politiken 12 May 1935.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">38<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The latter was mentioned in Leo Swane\u2019s review in <em>Berlingske Tidende<\/em>, where he said that:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cThose who attend the exhibitions showcasing young artists today will long since have noticed that John Christensen possesses quite extraordinary abilities, a strange freshness of observation, a sense of immediacy that repeatedly takes him right to the core of his chosen subject, and a keen sense of humour that calls forth the amusing and whimsical aspects of those subjects. One example would be his small picture of men working in the snow. But he is also a sensitive painter; watercolours such as those called Rain or Quiet Morning by the Wall are small scenes of great and rich painterly impact.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-39\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"39\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Swane, Leo: \u201cKoloristerne\u201d, Berlingske Tidende 13 May 1935; the painting of snow workers is presumably the one subsequently bought by G.A. Hagemann, reproduced in Uttenreitter (1940), p. 38, rather than the painting with a very similar subject, Snow-Clearing, which the SMK received as a donation from Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg in 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">39<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<figure style=\"width: 1300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig8_john_c_smk_kks13690.jpg\" width=\"1300\" height=\"1040\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 8.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>The Line 16 Tram Turning a Corner<\/em>. 1936. Pen, black ink on paper. 169 x 207 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, SMK, inv.no. KKS13690. Photo: SMK Foto.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>At John C.\u2019s solo show at Arnbaks Kunsthandel in November 1935 the SMK once again sent representatives; they bought a drawing and three watercolours, including the large watercolour <em>Girl with a Sewing Machine<\/em>, 1934 and <em>Winter Funeral <\/em>from 1928,<sup id=\"footnote-40\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"40\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"A note written by John C. in his copy of the catalogue for the Arnbak exhibition confirms that the work purchased by the Royal Collection of Graphic Art is indeed Falling Snow, catalogue entry 83. John C.\u2019s copy of the catalogue survives as part of Vagn Nielsen\u2019s collection of documentary materials, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">40<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0an early picture which includes many of the motifs that would become recurring traits in his art: a man with a shovel, a priest standing by an open grave, funeral parties, wreaths and a flag. At the exhibition held at the art dealer Mulle Nording in the Nyhavn area of Copenhagen in 1937, the museum bought a drawn portrait of the artist\u2019s daughter Lillian,<sup id=\"footnote-41\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"41\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Photograph and brief mention of the exhibition in Ekstrabladet 20 October 1937.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">41<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and purchases were also made directly from the artist during John C.\u2019s final years alive, including yet another N\u00f8rrebro scene, <em>The Line 16 Tram Turning a Corner, <\/em>1936,\u00a0<strong>[fig.8]\u00a0<\/strong>and two portraits: one of <em>Gudmund Hatt, Geographer and Professor<\/em> and one of <em>The Painter Helmuth Thomsen<\/em>. Finally, three works depicting scenes from Vridsl\u00f8semagle were also acquired from John C. himself: <em>Whitsun Light<\/em>, a small, naturalistic painting depicting a road winding into the distance, flanked by characteristic telephone masts and wires describing an arch that adds greater depth to the scene, as well as <em>Laburnums in a Garden <\/em>and <em>Garden Parasol<\/em>, idyllic scenes that shine and sparkle with colour, depicting the small garden at the artist\u2019s summer cottage. <strong>[fig.9]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>No paintings were bought for the SMK while John C. was alive. However, in 1938 he became represented at Ystad Konstmuseum, which received <em>Shadows on the wall. N\u00f8rrebro<\/em>, 1938, as a gift from Hofj\u00e6germester Hagemann from the manor of Bergsj\u00f8holm,<sup id=\"footnote-42\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"42\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"When Hagemann acquired the painting, the press instantly reported that it was intended for Ystad Konstmuseum: \u201cHofj\u00e6germester Hagemann, Bergsj\u00f8holm, yesterday visited John Christensen\u2019s exhibition at Arnbak\u2019s in Amagertorv, where he bought two oil paintings, one of which he intends to donate to Ystad Museum\u201d, Berlingske Tidende 12 October 1938 (unsigned entry); that same year Shadows on the Wall. N\u00f8rrebro was part of the total donation of Danish art that Hagemann gave to the museum.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">42<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and in 1939 Randers Kunstmuseum received <em>Self-portrait, Lamplight<\/em>, 1938, as a gift from the lawyer Poul Buhl. Finally, in 1939 John C. was added to the collection of Stiftsmuseet in Maribo, which acquired the watercolour <em>October Evening, N\u00f8rrebro<\/em>, 1938 (now owned by Fuglsang Kunstmuseum) from the art dealer Arnbak.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1100px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter oversized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/02\/fig9_john_c_smk_kks14124_0.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1100\" height=\"688\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 9.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>Garden Parasol<\/em>. 1938. Pencil, brush, watercolour on paper. 147 x 240 mm. The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, SMK, inv.no. KKS14124. Photo: SMK Foto.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2>The partnership between Leo Swane and Erik Zahle<\/h2>\n<p>The acquisitions made for the SMK took place while Leo Swane was director of the museum. According to Villads Villadsen, Swane effectively dominated the decisions about purchases made at the museum, including those for the Royal Collection of Graphic Art, throughout his time in the director\u2019s chair.<sup id=\"footnote-43\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"43\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Villadsen, Villads (1998): Statens Museum for Kunst 1827-1952, p. 287.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">43<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0However, as far as the acquisitions of John C.\u2019s art are concerned, all signs suggest that he was in agreement with Erik Zahle, who was curator at the collection of paintings during part of Swane\u2019s directorship and headed the Royal Collection of Graphic Art from 1933 to 1935.<\/p>\n<p>As has already been quoted, Leo Swane repeatedly wrote favourably about the artist, and he also did so in 1937 when he included John C. in a section entitled \u201cDe Unge\u201d (The Young Artists) in the reference work <em>Danmarks Malerkunst <\/em>(Danish Painting). Here, John C. was given a relatively prominent position as a \u201cconcluding vignette\u201d, inserted to ensure that the book would not have a \u201cdead end\u201d \u2013 after the Surrealists, in whom Leo Swane saw no artistic perspectives. He chose instead to conclude the reference work by taking \u201ca look at a man who, in the midst of N\u00f8rrebro in the heart of Copenhagen, has found Nature \u2013 the nature that surrounds us and the one inside all of mankind.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-44\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"44\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Zahle, Erik (ed.) (1937): Danmarks Malerkunst, p. 312.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">44<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0His description emphasised the fact that John C. was not spurred on by social concerns, but simply painted \u201chis entire little urban milieu\u201d because it was beautiful in his eyes, and that he \u2013 despite having received no formal training \u2013 possessed a keen sense for observing the baroque and the humorous, as well as an ability to seek out role models as required, including Harald Giersing and Henri Matisse. Emphasising that John C. was not a socially conscious artist in a political sense was evidently important to Leo Swane. He had no interest in promoting art that had been reined in to serve a political purpose.<\/p>\n<p>We do not know for certain whether Leo Swane knew John C. personally. However, we do know that Erik Zahle did so, at least from 1937, where he made documented visits to the artist in Vridsl\u00f8semagle.<sup id=\"footnote-45\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"45\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The catalogue for the exhibition Barbermaleren John Christensen, Assistens 2000, p. 8, shows a photograph of Erik Zahle and John C. together in Vridsl\u00f8semagle in the summer of 1937; Erik Zahle\u2019s papers include three other photos of John C. in Vridsl\u00f8semagle; Fonnesbech-Sandberg (1945), p. 44, states that Erik Zahle came to Vridsl\u00f8semagle and bought a painting, and that John C. was very proud of this fact.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">45<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Erik Zahle also made numerous references to John C. in reviews, for example in connection with the Koloristerne exhibition in 1936:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cThose who love contemporary French art have discovered and recognised some of the artistic charm of Paris in the work of this fresh N\u00f8rrebro painter. John Christensen can be playfully light and almost too perfectible in paintings such as his self-portrait and certain drawings. However, most of his penmanship and pencil studies evince a strangely convoluted and curly line that gradually, through dogged labour and numerous detours, works its way towards something that is exactly right.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-46\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"46\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Zahle, Erik: \u201cKoloristerne\u201d, Ekstrabladet 13 May 1936.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">46<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>A later head of the Royal Collection of Graphic Art, Erik Fischer, said about Erik Zahle that he was \u201cyoung concurrently with the first movement of cultural democratisation\u201d,<sup id=\"footnote-47\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"47\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Fischer, Erik: \u201dErik Zahle 1898\u20131969\u201d, in: Kunstmuseets \u00c5rsskrift 1966-70, 1970 (reprinted in: Billedtekster, 1988).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">47<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and this is confirmed by Zahle\u2019s writings from the 1930s; a time where he also introduced the art of drawing and printmaking to a wide audience through radio lectures and worked hard to break down the barriers between the general public and the study room at the Royal Collection of Graphic Art, which he believed ought to attract as wide an audience as the public libraries.<sup id=\"footnote-48\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"48\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"A radio lecture on graphic techniques, printed as \u201cSort paa hvidt som Kunst\u201d, in: Tegneren, June 1934, pp. 2-6; Sthyr, J\u00f8rgen and Erik Zahle (1939): Den kongelige Kobberstiksamling. Grafik og Tegninger.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">48<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Like Leo Swane, Zahle also felt that it was important to take a stand against the overtly political art of the time. In the catalogue for the exhibition <em>Moderne Bogillustration<\/em> (Modern Book Illustration), held in 1934 \u2013 the exhibition referred to by Leo Swane in the above quote about Wessel illustrations \u2013 Zahle made the following comment on the general interest in \u201csocial art\u201d in the opening article:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cIn our current day and age social art is much talked-about, even though it hardly gives the impression of great longevity; let us disregard such utopian fantasies and state firmly instead that art which is sold at prices that are affordable to most \u2013 that is social art. In this regard, illustrated books deserve a prominent position. Through public libraries and bookshops such books conveys fine art to a wide audience, admirably resolving a question of education for the people.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-49\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"49\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Zahle, Erik: \u201cL\u00e6se og se\u201d, in: Moderne Bogillustration, 1934; the exhibition was prepared by the craftsmen\u2019s associations Forening for Kunsthaandv\u00e6rk and Forening for Boghaandv\u00e6rk at the behest of architect Viggo Sten M\u00f8ller and painter Egon Mathiesen; these were later joined by draughtsman Ebbe Sadolin and Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">49<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Unlike Wilmann, Swane and Zahle made no particular note of the depiction of the city or of the working-class neighbourhood and its inhabitants as a distinctive trait of John C. Rather, the qualities emphasised by Erik Zahle were his artistic charm and idiosyncratic, curly hand that gradually homed in on its subject. He also pointed to John C.\u2019s originality \u2013 his ability to create vibrant, poetic works based on subject matter that had hitherto never been utilised in art and which was in itself without great significance. After John C.\u2019s death Leo Swane described him in these terms:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cAs an artist, John Christensen was entirely autodidact, demonstrating true originality in his works. In the streets of N\u00f8rrebro and the Assistens churchyard he found subject matter from our present-day Copenhagen that none have mined like him. He captured such scenes with a rarely seen keenness of observation of the milieu, and he was able to take even insignificant motifs as the starting point for vibrant and frequently highly poetic works. [\u2026] As one followed his evolution there could be no doubt that this was an artist of genuine importance, forging his own way ahead. Thus, he won a name for himself, both among fellow artists and among a more general art audience.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-50\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"50\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The application, sent to Bestyrelsen for Holger Petersens Fond, can be found in e.g. the papers of Poul Uttenreitter, supplement, KB, Tilg. 634. I. 2 with an accompanying letter dated 8 February 1940; carbon copy dated 14 February 1940, attached a recommendation written by Johannes C. Bjerg, Adam Fischer, Gudmund Hatt, Gerhard Henning, William Scharff, Olaf Rude and Poul Uttenreitter; from the papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">50<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>These words of praise were uttered in an application submitted to a foundation; Leo Swane phrased this application on behalf of a circle of artists and other friends seeking to secure some help for Dagny, who was suffering from depression after the death of John C. Those efforts coincided with the memorial exhibition staged by Kunstforeningen, which opened on 3 February 1940, just a month after the artist\u2019s death; an exhibition that saw Zahle expending great and focused efforts on the preparations. <strong>[fig.10]<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 1100px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter oversized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/02\/fig10_john_c_abm_1245x17_version_2.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1100\" height=\"823\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 10.<\/strong> John Christensen:\u00a0<em>Street Scene from Kapelvej<\/em>, 1938, etching, 154 x 205 mm, The Workers&#8217; Museum, Copenhagen, inv.no. 1245&#215;17. The etching also appears in The Royal Collection of Graphic Art, SMK. Both copies were supposedly printed by S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen. Photo: Allan Schnipper.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2>A trusted friend<\/h2>\n<p>During the tightly-scheduled preparations for the memorial exhibition Zahle was assisted by Poul Uttenreitter. Absolutely no instances of the moniker \u2018the Barber Painter\u2019 appear in the correspondence between the two. The artist is referred to as \u2018John Christensen\u2019, in Poul Uttenreitter\u2019s case simply \u2018John\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-51\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"51\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Letter from Poul Uttenreitter to Erik Zahle 27 January 1940, from the papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">51<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This corroborates the testimonials indicating that out of all the critics of the time, Uttenreitter had the closest personal relationship with John C.; indeed, he became one of his close friends. Erik Zahle called him \u201cJohn Christensen\u2019s friend and confidante\u201d,<sup id=\"footnote-52\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"52\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Letter (carbon copy) from Erik Zahle to the board of directors of the Ny Carlsberg Foundation 2 February 1940, from the papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">52<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg stated that John C. \u201cgot a very good and loyal friend in Poul Uttenreitter, whom he adored\u201d,<sup id=\"footnote-53\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"53\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Fonnesbech-Sandberg (1945), p. 43.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">53<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and finally the painter Emilie Demant Hatt wrote a letter to her husband when John C. was on his deathbed, stating that Dagny and John C. \u201ccount the Uttenreitters and us as their true friends.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-54\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"54\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Emilie Demant Hatt in a letter to Gudmund Hatt 4 November 1939, in the papers of Aage Gudmund Hatt and Emilie Laurentze Demant Hatt, Rigsarkivet.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">54<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Poul Uttenreitter\u2019s impact as an opinion former on the Danish interwar art scene is perhaps not sufficiently recognised today. He had known Leo Swane since childhood,<sup id=\"footnote-55\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"55\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Two letters from Sigurd Swane to Poul Uttenreitter 26 February 1942 and 15 December 1946, in the papers Poul Uttenreitter, KB, NKS 4722, 4 sums up the acquaintanceship between Uttenreitter and both Sigurd and Leo Swane, listing their addresses during their childhood and youth, where they lived near each other in Frederiksberg.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">55<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and they shared a great degree of affinity and complicity with the first generation of the Gr\u00f8nningen group \u2013 as well as their predilection for John C.\u2019s work, of course. When John C. needed his first-ever catalogue foreword in 1935 \u2013 in connection with an extensive solo show at Arnbaks Kunsthandel \u2013 Uttenreitter picked up the pen. Here he did not elaborate on the narrative that viewed the artist and his work through the lens of the specific barbershop setting; rather, he effected a break with the tradition established by Houmark by opting for a bird\u2019s eye perspective when describing the artist\u2019s world. To Uttenreitter, John C. was a Copenhagener par excellence:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cTo those who are enemies of paintings of home and hearth, it cannot be denied that this world is confined by a circle that touches upon the Dronning Louise bridge and has its centre somewhere near the Assistens churchyard. It never occurred to him to paint subjects outside of this circle. His spring is a spring that takes place between walls, his evenings in the garrets of Fyensgade are awash with the light of the heavens vaulting above a forest of chimneys, and in summer his holidays from paved streets are set in the Lilliputian world of allotments on the far side of the circle.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-56\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"56\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Uttenreitter, Poul: \u201cJohn Christensen\u201d, in: John Christensen Udstilling, Arnbaks Kunsthandel 14 to 27 November 1935.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">56<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<figure style=\"width: 849px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig11_john_c_smk_kms4266.jpg\" width=\"849\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 11.<\/strong> John Christensen, <em>Snow-Clearing<\/em>, 1933, oil on canvas, 48 x 37 cm, Statens Museum for Kunst, inv.no. KMS4266. Photo: SMK Foto.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The comments regarding home and hearth were a jab at the Danish architect, writer and critic PH, who \u2013 in essays from 1932 and in his book <em>Hvad med kulturen<\/em> (What about culture) from 1933 \u2013 had issued warnings against the reactionary aspects of celebrating one\u2019s immediate surroundings \u2013 without, however, including John C. as part of this reviled tendency.<\/p>\n<p>Poul Uttenreitter eventually came to own no less than 15 works by John C., including the watercolour <em>In the Garden<\/em> from 1937, which is now part of the Royal Collection of Graphic Art.<sup id=\"footnote-57\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"57\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Uttenreitter was also the one who chose the three drawings for J.W. Larsen\u2019s collection, according to a letter from Poul Uttenreitter to Erik Zahle 23 January 1940, from the papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">57<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0After the artist\u2019s death he also involved himself actively in alleviating Dagny\u2019s dire economic straits. He strove to have the SMK buy a painting from her or from a private collector \u2013 in either case the objective would be for Dagny to have the money. The collector Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg was reportedly very favourably disposed to this latter proposal,<sup id=\"footnote-58\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"58\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Letter from Poul Uttenreitter to Erik Zahle 27 January 1940, from the papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">58<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0but the attempts to persuade the Gallery Commission were unsuccessful. An entry in the acquisitions committee\u2019s protocol dated 10 February 1940 states that the committee had visited\u00a0\u201cJohn Christensen\u2019s memorial exhibition at Kunstforeningen, where there was no general wish to make any purchase from the paintings on display. Swane informed us that the Royal Collection of Graphic Art already owned a substantial number of drawings and watercolours by the artist, and there was general consensus that he is presumably best represented at the museum in this capacity.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-59\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"59\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The protocols of the acquisitions committee 1919\u201342, SMK; present at the meeting were Andreas M\u00f8ller, Jais Nielsen, Utzon-Frank and Leo Swane.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">59<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>A fortnight later the museum received one of the paintings featured at the memorial exhibition, <em>Snow-Clearing <\/em>from 1933, as a donation from Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg. The offer of this gift was arranged by Uttenreitter as a go-between, and Leo Swane accepted the painting as \u201cone of the few that could properly represent him here.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-60\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"60\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Letter (carbon copy) from Leo Swane to Mrs Fonnesbech-Sandberg 24 February 1940, SMK letter archives; two out of three paintings later acquired by the museum were also featured at the memorial exhibition: Self Portrait, 1936, which had also been owned by Fonnesbech-Sandberg, and Circus Artists in the Ring, which was still the property of Dagny at the time of the memorial exhibition, but was acquired later that year by Gudmund Hatt.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">60<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0<strong>[fig.11]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Certain differences can be seen between what Poul Uttenreitter emphasised in John C. compared to the traits accentuated by Swane and Zahle. Uttenreitter pointed to the primitive and sensitive aspects, but also to his drastic and humorous qualities; an assessment that he would elaborate on in his small book on John C. from 1940.<sup id=\"footnote-61\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"61\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Uttenreitter (1940), p. 18.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">61<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He drew particular attention to the circus scenes and N\u00f8rrebro motifs, praising them for their entirely original, empathetic observation of the fantastic life that unfolded there. Like Leo Swane, Poul Uttenreitter also pointed out that John C. was not a \u2018social artist\u2019 in the traditional sense of the term. Yet he also emphasised how the artist identified intimately with the proletarian N\u00f8rrebro area and all its people, rallies, protest marches and red flags waving. Uttenreitter prized such solidarity with the working-class neighbourhood, its inhabitants, culture and traditions. However, like Zahle and Swane he too felt a need to deny the existence of any deliberately social\/political content; such intentions were anathema in the worldview favoured by these three friends \u2013 whereas Wilmann took a different view.<\/p>\n<h2>The primitive and the democratic<\/h2>\n<p>In his book about the history of the SMK, Villads Villadsen has described Leo Swane\u2019s devotion to contemporary art as being firmly restricted to a narrow circle of Swane\u2019s contemporaries, specifically the circle around Giersing and Gr\u00f8nningen. Swane\u2019s acquisitions of contemporary art after 1930 are portrayed as tasks he completed without any real interest, exclusively out of a sense of obligation \u2013 except when buying works created by the aforementioned circle. For example, the book states that: \u201cdue to his notorious resentment of all abstract art, the obligation to regularly add new contemporary art to the collection meant that even more of the least interesting art produced at the time was bought.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-62\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"62\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Villadsen (1998), p. 272.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">62<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Leo Swane has called such assessments down upon his own head due to his infamous dismissal of Picasso; a response that posterity has, quite naturally, viewed as an example of a vision so blinkered it verges on the disqualifying. Swane\u2019s position has grown increasingly incomprehensible as the narrative about 20th\u00a0century art has become a narrative about modernism\u2019s steady evolution via new breaks and new departures;<sup id=\"footnote-63\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"63\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Cf. Hayden, Hans: Modernismen som institution. Om etableringen av ett estetiskt och historiografiskt paradigm, Stockholm 2006.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">63<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0a position that has largely consigned all those trends and artists that Swane favoured to obscurity. They quite simply did not appear interesting to art history any more. However, this in no way means that they were not the object of Swane\u2019s genuine interest and commitment. For example, he evinced an enduring interest in artists with a robust, \u2018primitive\u2019 approach to things; this included the Swedish artist and sculptor Bror Hjorth\u2019s rough, colourful art with its obvious links to folk art motifs and modes of expression.<sup id=\"footnote-64\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"64\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Bror Hjorth expressed his gratitude for this in a letter to Leo Swane 30 November 1959, from the papers of Leo Swane, KB, Tilg. 475, stating that Swane\u2019s acquisition for the SMK practically meant \u201cthat I had my breakthrough in Stockholm. Then you also, in your great generosity, opened up your museum for a retrospective of my work. You have been my guardian angel.\u201d; the 1948 exhibition at the SMK prompted a radio broadcast of a conversation between Leo Swane, Preben Wilmann and Adam Fischer where Swane\u2019s enthusiasm for Hjorth was clearly expressed; transcription in the papers of Leo Swane and in the archives of the Bror Hjorth foundation, Uppsala stadsarkiv.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">64<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He shared this interest with Erik Zahle, who knew and appreciated Bror Hjorth \u2013 as did Poul Uttenreitter,<sup id=\"footnote-65\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"65\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Uttenreitter, Poul: \u201cBror Hjorth\u201d, in: Tilskueren 1936, pp. 145\u2013153 (February); Erik Zahle\u2019s appreciation is expressed in e.g. Zahle, Erik: \u201cBror Hjorth\u201d, Ekstrabladet 15 January 1936, which is commented on in a letter from Bror Hjorth to Erik Zahle 4 February 1936, from the papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">65<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0whose predilection for all things primitive and primordial was also evident in connection with the Sami writer and artist Johan Turi; Uttenreitter collaborated with the painter Emilie Demant Hatt to have Turi featured at the KE in 1928.<sup id=\"footnote-66\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"66\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Letters from Emilie Demant Hatt to Poul Uttenreitter dated 5 October 1928, 25 October 1928 and 30 October 1928, from the papers of Poul Uttenreitter, NKS 4722,4.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">66<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The period\u2019s widespread appreciation of the primitive and primordial had an impact on the reception of John C., but so too did the strong focus on the social aspects of art and its democratisation. As has already been touched upon, John C.\u2019s career ran its course while discussions on worker\u2019s art and social art were a recurring feature of cultural life. However, the discussion on what \u2018proper\u2019 working-class art should be like is not the most relevant point when considering the reception of John C. It was a discussion dominated by firmly established, opposing fronts set down by groups of social democrats, the so-called cultural radicals, and the far left; the debate mainly centred on the link between aesthetics and politics, particularly on the progressive potential of aesthetic innovation. John C. was neither a participant nor a subject in this discussion. In his case a far more wide-ranging interest in democratisation of the realm of culture is a relevant context for the appreciation of his art.<\/p>\n<p>Expanding the traditional art audience to also include the working class was a strongly held wish among artists and art professionals alike, which makes the issue relevant when considering John C. as an artist. In the 1930s there was widespread support for the view that a democratisation of cultural life \u2013 in the sense of having cultural assets made accessible \u2013 should be ensured through efforts on the part of artists, institutions and movements alike. The arrival of working class people and the workers\u2019 movement in the field of culture, both as opinion formers and as potential art audiences and consumers, was accompanied by a range of specific initiatives intended to forge stronger links between the common people and \u2018good art\u2019. Several of the new artist groups that emerged in the 1930s deliberately set out to send new messages to mass audiences via their exhibitions. The Corner and Koloristerne groups, both of which were established in 1932, and Kammeraterne, who first exhibited in 1935, all offered installment plans for prospective buyers and emphasised the fact that people with modest incomes were now also able to buy art. Broadsheet newspaper <em>Politiken <\/em>wrote the following about Koloristerne, of which John C. was a founding member:\u00a0\u201cAudiences should visit them in order to view art \u2013 and to buy art at very affordable prices, too, as the artists themselves expressly state. For they believe that that the \u2018social\u2019 aspect of art resides in reaching a wide audience, not in the art itself, which is elevated above such matters.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-67\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"67\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"-n.: \u201c\u201dKoloristerne\u201d aabnede i Gaar\u201d, Politiken 4 December 1932.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">67<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The fact that some of the artists, as well as the representatives of the established art institution, all felt that it was incumbent on them to denounce a specific concept of \u2018social art\u2019 \u2013 emphasising that their take on social art focused on art that was accessible to all rather than art intended as political agitation \u2013 rests mainly on a reluctance against being harnessed to a particular political position; one that was most forcefully expressed by the radical left-wing Monde group. The repeated avowals that John C. did not create \u2018social art\u2019 were not intended to suggest an absence of commitment to social issues or situations in his art. Most observers presumably clearly perceived his affinity and solidarity with the neighbourhood in which he lived. Rather, the fact that he was indeed received as a social artist \u2013 but in a good way \u2013 reflects how this theme was so strongly embedded in the era that it coloured many assessments, and artists of John C.\u2019s type would inevitably be viewed through that lens.<\/p>\n<h2>The collectors<\/h2>\n<p>Given that the objective of selling good art to a wide audience was often openly proclaimed \u2013 for example in the introductory leaflet published by Arbejdernes Kunstforening (The Worker\u2019s Art Association) in 1936, which promised potential members that they would regularly receive \u201coffers of fine art of good quality, to adorn your home and delight your eye \u2013 at affordable prices\u201d \u2013 it may be worthwhile to examine who actually bought John C.\u2019s art when his sales increased. Even though the question is not easily answered, given that so little material from the artist\u2019s own archives survives today,<sup id=\"footnote-68\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"68\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"In addition to the statements of ownership made in catalogues, our knowledge of sales and collectors is based on lists and notes made in connection with the memorial exhibition at Kunstforeningen in 1940, found in the papers of Erik Zahle; on transcripts of conversations with collectors from the second half of the 1940s and on a few lists written by John C. himself, detailing payments made on instalment plans; these lists were acquired by Vagn Nielsen from Dagny Christensen and are now the property of ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">68<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0it is nevertheless possible to answer the question of whether the class-related barriers of education were in fact broken down. The answer is no. Certainly if you look at the patrons and buyers that had a real impact on John C.\u2019s finances.<\/p>\n<p>In the early 1930s his prices were so low that any profits made from art were of little or no consequence compared to his earnings as a barber. From the mid-1930s his prices went up, yet his art remained affordable to most; it was not the exclusive province of the rich. Indeed, most buyers did not belong among the very affluent; rather, they were mainly educated middle-class citizens and, to some extent, art critics and fellow artists.<\/p>\n<p>In an interview with <em>Ekstrabladet<\/em> in 1935, John C. related how he sold his first painting in November 1934 when a university professor entered his barbershop, put down 200 kroner on the desk and carried the painting off with him. John C. almost had a stroke from the surprise of making such a straightforward sale \u2013 in cash, even.<sup id=\"footnote-69\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"69\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Dr. Rank: \u201cHos Barberen, som maler\u201d, Ekstrabladet 9 January 1935.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">69<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0There is much to suggest that this buyer was Gudmund Hatt, a cultural geographer who was married to the painter Emilie Demant Hatt; he may have been the first patron to ever buy directly from the barbershop and at the \u2018regular\u2019 price, which at this point, in the mid-1930s, came to around 200 kroner for a medium-sized John C. oil painting. At the time of the artist\u2019s death the Hatts owned at least ten works by John C., of which five were oils.<sup id=\"footnote-70\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"70\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"According to lists found in the papers of Erik Zahle; Nicolaisen, Henning (2000) also identified the professor as Gudmund Hatt.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">70<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0No mention is made to suggest which of these paintings was Hatt\u2019s first purchase, but it may have been<em> Sunshine Girl<\/em> from 1934, which O.V. Borch would later describe as \u201c\u2026 the <em>Sunshine Girl<\/em> on her bicycle, executed in Chagall\u2019s transparent style, with the growing Tree of Life\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-71\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"71\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Borch, O.V.: \u201cKapelvej-Kvarterets Maler. John Christensens Mindeudstilling\u201d, B.T. 10 February1940; it was a relatively large picture, measuring 52 x 39 cm and insured for DKK 500 at the memorial exhibition, where it was listed as the property of Emilie Demant Hatt.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">71<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The couple also owned <em>Self-Portrait<\/em> from 1934, but that painting almost seems too small to have cost the price stated.<sup id=\"footnote-72\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"72\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The self-portrait measures only 23 x 17 cm and was insured for DKK 200 at the memorial exhibition; it appears in a photograph from 1950 showing the home of Emilie and Gudmund Hatt, reproduced in Ernst Manker (1967) P\u00e5 tredje botten, Stockholm, p. 67; Ernst Manker, who was the head of the Sami department at Nordiska Museet in Stockholm for many years, describes both husband and wife in his book. I am grateful to Babara Sjoholm for referring me to Manker\u2019s book. The painting is in a private collection.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">72<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Emilie Demant Hatt was the official owner of most of the couple\u2019s art collection. She began her career as a naturalistic painter, but in the interwar years she developed a visionary vein of Expressionism. Today she is perhaps chiefly remembered for her efforts to raise awareness of Sami life and literature \u2013 e.g. through her collaboration with Johan Turi, whom she encouraged to write; she helped him publish <em>Muitalus s\u00e1miid birra<\/em>, 1910 (<em>En Bog om Lappernes Liv<\/em>) (A Book on Sami Life). We do not know how the Hatts and John C. first became acquainted, but they gradually became friends, and John C. drew and painted several portraits of Gudmund that do not seem to have been commissioned by the sitter. Indeed, the largest and most subtly humorous of these,<em> Wise Man in a Spring Garden<\/em>, remained in the artist\u2019s ownership (it is now owned by the Museum of Copenhagen). Shortly before John C.\u2019s death the couple offered to buy yet another painting for their collection in order to help the family, which was facing financial problems.<sup id=\"footnote-73\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"73\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Emilie Demant Hatt in a letter to Gudmund Hatt 4 November 1939, from the papers of Aage Gudmund Hatt and Emilie Laurentze Demant Hatt, Rigsarkivet.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">73<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The work in question was presumably <em>Circus Artists in the Ring<\/em> from 1932.<sup id=\"footnote-74\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"74\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"According to the catalogue for the February 1940 memorial exhibition at Kunstforeningen the painting belonged to Mrs Dagny Christensen, but according to Poul Uttenreitter\u2019s book on the artist, published later in 1940, it belonged to professor Dr. Phil. Gudmund Hatt; after Hatt\u2019s death it was sold at auction at Kunsthallen 14-15 March 1961 alongside a range of other John C.-works; it was acquired by the SMK in 2011 after having passed through the hands of several private owners.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">74<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The one patron who had the greatest financial impact on John C. was undoubtedly Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg, who would later become a major collector of abstract art, and whose first passion in the field of collecting was oriental crafts and design. At this point in time her collection interests had shifted towards Danish Modernism, with Olaf Rude, Edvard Weie, Harald Giersing and Jens S\u00f8ndergaard as key figures, and these were gradually supplemented by artists from the new groups emerging in the 1930s. Koloristerne were prominently featured in the collection, and John C. came to have a unique position. Fonnesbech-Sandberg built a diverse and representative collection of more than 100 works by John C.; a collection that has since become scattered to the four winds: she was obliged to sell her collection when her husband\u2019s business \u2013 Torben Fonnesbech-Sandberg was a tea merchant \u2013 suffered during World War II.<sup id=\"footnote-75\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"75\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"It would hardly be possible to reconstruct Fonnesbech-Sandberg\u2019s John C. collection down to the last detail, but we can get quite far by comparing the catalogues from the sales of the collection with exhibition catalogues and with museum inventories, for quite a few works from Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg have over time found their way to the museums via other collectors; cf. Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg\u2019s Malerisamling, Winkel &amp; Magnussen 6 March 1940 and Fru Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg\u2019s samling af Maleren John Christensen\u2019s Arbejder, Winkel &amp; Magnussen 22 \u2013 28 June 1943; seven, possibly eight works featured at the 1940 auction were not identical to those of the 1943 auction; this may either mean that they were sold or that she chose to keep them; Vagn Nielsen\u2019s catalogue with notes and a correspondence between Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg and Vagn Nielsen, ABM, shows that she still owned works by John C. after 1943; in a conversation with Vagn Nielsen, the art dealer Henning Larsen expressed some bitterness against Fonnesbech-Sandberg, who had persuaded him to sell works shortly before she put her collection up for sale, cf. Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes from a conversation with Henning Larsen 20 October 1949, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">75<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg paid standard prices for most of her collection, ranging from 15 kroner for a small drawing up to 200 or 300 kroner for a painting. Her affluence was not such that she eschewed instalment plans; she would typically pay John C. 50 kroner every two weeks so that he gradually got a relatively steady income from her.<sup id=\"footnote-76\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"76\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Two lists at ABM, one of which is written on Koloristerne notepaper, detail her purchases and payments in 1938\u201339. They list prices ranging from DKK 15 to DKK 175, of which Black Tree white snow cost DKK 100 and By the grace of God at DKK 75, both now owned by ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">76<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0We do not know exactly when she made her first purchase, but it probably took place at one of Koloristerne\u2019s exhibitions in the mid-1930s.<sup id=\"footnote-77\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"77\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Five members from the 1930s lineup of the Koloristerne group were represented in her first collection according to Fonnesbech-Sandberg (1945), p. 52; the 1937 Koloristerne catalogue lists her as the owner of Helmuth Thomsen: Portrait of a French painter, and the 1940 auction catalogue shows more paintings by Thomsen. It also shows us that she owned works by Hjalmar Kragh Pedersen and Peder Larsen.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">77<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0There is much to suggest that she knew John C. personally; she visited him in his N\u00f8rrebro and Vridsl\u00f8semagle homes, sat for portraits on several occasions, and devoted a substantial section to him when writing her memoirs.<sup id=\"footnote-78\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"78\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"She also had her portrait painted by a range of other artists, including S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen, Jens S\u00f8ndergaard, Olaf Rude, Kirsten Kj\u00e6r, Ingeborg H\u00f8jrup, Bent von Muellen, Anette Houth, Kai Nielsen and Holger J. Jensen.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">78<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>After John C.\u2019s death Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg helped and supported his family and also helped maintain the general awareness and appreciation of his work. Poul Uttenreitter strongly believed that she paid for his funeral.<sup id=\"footnote-79\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"79\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Letter from Poul Uttenreitter to Erik Zahle 27 January 1940, papers of Erik Zahle.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">79<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0What we know for certain is that she launched the collection to fund a memorial headstone for John C. in 1946; the stone was officially unveiled at Assistens churchyard on the 50th\u00a0anniversary of the day of the artist\u2019s birth. The memorial stone was designed by Henry Heerup, another artist that she treasured particularly highly.<\/p>\n<p>John C. held a special position in her collection; a claim that is substantiated by the fact that she kept most of the works when she was first forced to sell parts of her collection for financial reasons in 1940; she hung on to them until 1943. To Fonnesbech-Sandberg, John C. became a gateway to the abstract artists she would later collect. Perhaps John C.\u2019s art also helped open her eyes to the art of Henry Heerup, who was the only artist of the later CoBrA association to be part of her collection in the 1930s. What we do know with greater certainly is that her collection of John C.\u2019s art was responsible for first establishing a direct acquaintance between herself and the abstracts. Asger Jorn, whose connection to Fonnesbech-Sandberg would prove especially productive, first visited her home on an errand to pick up two John C. paintings for reproduction in the journal <em>Helhesten<\/em>.<sup id=\"footnote-80\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"80\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Cf. Andersen, Troels (1994): Asger Jorn. En biografi. \u00c5rene 1914-53, p. 72, where you will find a reproduction of Max M\u00fcller\u2019s photograph of Asger Jorn visiting Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg around 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">80<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In the journal, the pictures were accompanied by a text by Robert Dahlmann Olsen that positioned John C. as \u201cthe link between the younger and older generations that has hitherto been missing in Danish art\u201d. Dahlmann Olsen preferred his early paintings. <em>Little Girl Looking at the Stars<\/em>, 1931 and <em>Autumn Evening<\/em> 1933 were the examples selected. Whether they were chosen by Dahlmann Olsen or Jorn we do not know, but the praise heaped on John C. in <em>Helhesten<\/em> focused on the spontaneous and symbolic aspects of his work:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cHis first symbolic imagery constitutes a spontaneous painterly breakthrough. It embodies a pent-up store of imagination and emotion that refused to be fettered by commonly accepted aesthetic ideals, and which could only run its natural course by bursting the seams of naturalistic form and proportion, surrendering entirely to the fantastical and the mystic. His symbols are imbued with a magical, painterly strength and forcefulness of the kind that arises around the primitive symbolism of our culture.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-81\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"81\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Dahlmann Olsen, R.: \u201cJohn C.\u201d, Helhesten vol. 1, issue 2, pp. 62\u201363.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">81<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Such emphasis on spontaneous, mystic and magical qualities was entirely novel in the reception of John C. at the time, but is certainly in keeping with the spontaneous-abstract project that characterised a significant part of the circle around the <em>Helhesten <\/em>journal. One might reasonably assume that the curly, doodling qualities of John C.\u2019s hand and the sense of unpredictable compositional processes that permeates many of his drawings also spoke directly to the <em>Helhesten <\/em>circle. So too would his open, all-embracing relationship with any mode of expression that happened to be at hand, regardless of whether it belonged to the realms of high art or was anchored in popular culture.<\/p>\n<p>The ranks of early collectors of John C.\u2019s work includes a few other women, among them Betty Crone, who was married to the director of the Danmark insurance company, Frederik L\u00f8nborg Crone; at the time of John C.\u2019s death she owned at least sixteen works by him.<sup id=\"footnote-82\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"82\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Lists found among the papers of Erik Zahle; according to the family Betty Crone was the active party in connection with all art buying; I am grateful for Johan Casper Crone for information about the Crone family.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">82<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0A \u2018Th. Crone\u2019, whom the memorial exhibition inventory lists as owning a painting, is presumably the couple\u2019s eldest son Thomas. Betty Crone continued to expand her collection until hear death in 1948, and the Crone family \u2013 which has many branches \u2013 is a prominent example among the several families that have maintained their John C. inheritance and even continued to expand that collection. We do not know whether Betty Crone made purchases directly from the barbershop. Three of the works were purchased from Arnbaks Kunsthandel, while others were acquired at the Koloristerne exhibitions and paid for in monthly instalments over the course of 1938\u201339; the instalments were fairly regular and mostly set at 20 kroner, whereas Th. Crone would pay rates of as little as 5 kroner every month.<sup id=\"footnote-83\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"83\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"List of sales made by the art dealer Arnbak, from the papers of Erik Zahle; Arnbak\u2019s gallery held solo shows of John C.\u2019s work in 1935 and 1938, but his works were also featured in various group exhibitions at the gallery; John C.\u2019s lists, written on Koloristerne notepaper, of instalment plan payments made in 1938-39, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">83<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The home of the parents of graphic artist Povl Christensen attracted many artists, and quite a lot of art was purchased for their Kochsvej residence. It was not Povl Christensen\u2019s father, the merchant H.C. Christensen, who was interested in art, but his mother Petrea, who reportedly also bought works directly from the barbershop.<sup id=\"footnote-84\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"84\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Information provided by Christiane Pedersen, grandchild of Petrea Christensen, November 2012.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">84<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Her collection of John C.\u2019s art has largely been kept in the family, but <em>Self-Portrait <\/em>from 1936 was donated to Randers Kunstmuseum by Povl Christensen, who stated that his mother owned seven paintings and fifteen graphic works by the artist. <strong>[fig.12]<\/strong><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 798px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig12_john_c_randers_kunstmuseum_0605.jpg\" width=\"798\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 12.<\/strong> John Christensen:<em> Self-Portrait<\/em>. 1936. Oil on canvas mounted on veneer. 27 x 19.5 cm. Randers Kunstmuseum, inv.no. 0605. Photo: Niels Erik H\u00f8ybye.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>As we have seen, several of the early collectors were women who bought art with whatever money they could keep for themselves out of housekeeping budgets that may have been fairly substantial for the time, but not lavish. There were, however, male collectors too. Their ranks included J\u00f8rgen N\u00f8rballe, who owned at least 39 works, some of which were early drawings and watercolours that have since ended up at The Workers&#8217; Museum, Copenhagen.<sup id=\"footnote-85\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"85\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Four watercolours owned by ABM \u2013 all originally in the collection of J\u00f8rgen N\u00f8rballe, one of them dated 1927 \u2013 quite clearly constitute a series; even though their formats are not entirely identical, they share the same colour scheme, style and paper quality.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">85<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0He was an upper-secondary schoolteacher at N\u00f8rre Gymnasium, which was then located at Gartnergade 15, and he would have frequented the Kapelvej neighbourhood during the course of his everyday pursuits. It is likely that he had his hair cut at John C.\u2019s barbershop; they certainly became friendly enough to exchange Christmas cards and other greetings.<sup id=\"footnote-86\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"86\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Information provided by N\u00f8rballe\u2019s daughter-in-law Esther N\u00f8rballe 24 November 1999, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">86<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Men, too, would buy works of art on an instalment plan; for example, the senior bank clerk P.E. de Renouard paid by degrees,<sup id=\"footnote-87\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"87\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"John C.\u2019s lists, written on Koloristerne notepaper, of sales made 1938-40, ABM, list prices ranging from DKK 30 to 200 and instalments ranging from DKK 10 to 100; some of these payments continue until 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">87<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0and so did Jarl Borgen, who would later go on to become a successful publisher; he made his first purchases directly from the barbershop and eventually came to know John C. well enough to get invited to both his homes, in N\u00f8rrebro and in Vridsl\u00f8semagle.<sup id=\"footnote-88\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"88\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Jarl Borgen\u2019s first acquisition was Untitled (Danse macabre), 1933, now owned by Museum Jorn; at John C.\u2019s house Jarl Borgen met e.g. S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen, Wilhelm Freddie, Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg and Poul Uttenreitter, as reported during a conversation with Jarl Borgen 6 September 2011.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">88<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The collectors who bought art during John C.\u2019s own lifetime also included a range of art historians and critics. Poul Uttenreitter has already been mentioned. He owned at least fifteen works, including<em> Rain and Storm<\/em>, 1936, which is now owned by ARoS Aarhus Art Museum. Erik Zahle owned at least three works, two of which were bought from Arnbak, while Jan Zibrandtsen owned one. A wide range of artists also had John C.\u2019s art in their homes; some of those works would have been bought outright, others swapped or received as a gift. This group of owners included the sculptors Gottfred Eickhoff, Eigil Knuth, Knud Nellemose, Hans Olsen and Adam Fischer, the painters William Scharff and Aage Gitz-Johansen, the draughtsman B\u00f8rge Biilmann Petersen and quite a few more. Finally, it is worth noting that the Swedish painter and sculptor Bror Hjorth \u2013 whose own work saw him working with his materials in a coarse, \u2018primitive\u2019 manner, drawing heavily on the forms and symbolism of folk art \u2013 bought two pictures from Arnbak in 1938.<sup id=\"footnote-89\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"89\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Berlingske Tidende 12 October 1938 (unsigned notice).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">89<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0We do not know whether Bror Hjorth met John C. during his stays in Copenhagen. He may also have become aware of his work through Swane, Zahle or Uttenreitter, with whom he was regularly in touch.<\/p>\n<p>Holger Hansen, a mechanic, is the only worker listed as the owner of a John C. work in the inventories prepared by Erik Zahle on the occasion of the memorial exhibition. Zahle has noted that Wilmann may be able to come up with the names of other such owners. However, we should probably apply some reservations regarding the size and scope of Zahle\u2019s and Uttenreitter\u2019s acquaintanceships among working men, and hence we should also be wary when considering their actual opportunities for possessing full insight into John C.\u2019s patronage from workers. For example, many such buyers may have purchased their works directly from the barbershop. But it seems reasonable to assume that they would have been aware of any major working-class collectors if they had existed.<\/p>\n<h2>Decline in institutional interest<\/h2>\n<p>The years that followed after John C.\u2019s death brought a series of memorial exhibitions that reaffirmed his broad appeal and acclaim. As has already been mentioned, the first such exhibition took place at Kunstforeningen just a month after his death, the next was staged at the Fischer og Krarups Kunsthandel in September that year, and in 1946 Foreningen for ung dansk Kunst (The Society for Young Danish Art) arranged an exhibition at Tokanten on the occasion of the 50th\u00a0anniversary of the artist\u2019s birth. The latter became a veritable hit; it was visited by 3,000 people in its first week and was regularly supplemented by works that emerged from private collectors.<sup id=\"footnote-90\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"90\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Unsigned notices in Berlingske Tidende 28 April and 5 May 1946.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">90<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Even though the artist continued to be known as John Christensen or simply John C., the \u2018barber\u2019 aspect was a very prominent part of his identity. Fellow artist Folmer Bendtsen even found it difficult to think of the artist without mentally adding \u2018the Barber\u2019, and even more difficult to not associate him with the N\u00f8rrebro neighbourhood \u2013 \u201cthat quirky N\u00f8rrebro atmosphere that was his unique contribution to this decade of Danish art.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-91\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"91\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Bendtsen, Folmer: \u201cJohn C.\u201d, Social-Demokraten (Hjemmets S\u00f8ndag) 28 January 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">91<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0The distinctive atmosphere of the barbershop was also a regularly revisited topic \u2013 and one that was frequently embellished upon. N\u00f8rrebro \u2013 this densely populated suburb of Copenhagen, a provincial city right in the heart of the city, with a gallery of glorious characters \u2013 was a firmly established part of the various descriptions of John C.\u2019s distinctive traits as an artist, such as his immersion in detail that led to a barefaced vein of realism, but also to a special sense of poetry. Descriptions would then typically go on to focus on how he combined the autodidact and unspoilt with something innately artistic, on the merging of naivety and sophisticated subtlety. A new trend emerges in these descriptions: emphasis is placed on positing the artist within the grand narratives of art history, on positioning him within the upper echelons of art, preferably amongst the great French artists. Preben Wilmann believed that John C. possessed \u201ca vibrant, reverberating artistic sensibility that is more frequently found in France than in Scandinavia\u201d,<sup id=\"footnote-92\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"92\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Pr. W.: \u201cEn m\u00e6rkelig Kunstnersk\u00e6bne er afsluttet\u201d, Social-Demokraten 3 January 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">92<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Kai Flor summed up his work by stating that he was \u201con a par with the great French draughtsmen\u201d,<sup id=\"footnote-93\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"93\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"K.F.: \u201cMaleren John Christensen er d\u00f8d\u201d, Berlingske Tidende 3 January 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">93<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Kaj Borchsenius was reminded of <em>le Douanier <\/em>Rousseau,<sup id=\"footnote-94\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"94\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Kaj B.: \u201cMaler-Barberen d\u00f8de i Gaar\u201d, Politiken 3 January 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">94<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0whereas Else Kai Sass, who would later become professor in art history, called him \u201cA Danish van Gogh\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-95\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"95\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"E.K.S.: \u201cEn dansk van Gogh. John Christensens Mindeudstilling\u201d, Nationaltidende 16 February 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">95<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Another characteristic feature emerging in the assessment of John C.\u2019s art at this point is a renewed focus on how death was an ever-present reality throughout his life and work. After his early death, his life came to be regarded as having been forever lived in the shadow of death, for example in the aforementioned article by Folmer Bendtsen and also by Kai Flor, who wrote about his \u201cdefiant living\u201d and believed that \u201c<em>The wall between Life and Death <\/em>unleashed the truest and most deeply personal aspects of his mind\u201d.<sup id=\"footnote-96\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"96\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"K-r.: \u201cJohn Christensens Mindeudstilling\u201d, Berlingske Tidende 4 February 1940.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">96<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 574px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig13_john_c_abm_1245x1_bemaerk_max_10x16cm_i_144dpi.jpg\" width=\"574\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 13.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>Self-Portrait with Figure<\/em>. 1931. Oil on sackcloth. 123 x 58 cm. The Workers\u2019 Museum, \u00a0Copenhagen, inv.no. 1245&#215;1. This early self-portrait was one of the works that made the greatest impression on Vagn Nielsen at the exhibitions held after the death of John C. In 1947 he succeeded in acquiring the painting from Winkel og Magnussen, and through conversations with Max M\u00fcller he established that the painting had been featured at the John C. exhibition at Henning Larsen in 1931, where it was purchased by the singer Jens Friis Hansen, who manned the gallery. Photo: Allan Schnipper.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>After the rapid succession of memorial exhibitions things did, however, go somewhat downhill for John C., particularly as far as the interest shown by art institutions was concerned; he was even left out of the reference works for several decades. Nevertheless, during that same period the artist was reinterpreted in the context of the labour movement, primarily due to the efforts made by Alma and Vagn Nielsen, a married couple who, on quite ordinary workers\u2019 income, built an extensive art collection from 1940 onwards, focusing mainly on works by John C., Hjalmar Kragh Pedersen and Henry Heerup. Their collecting was permeated by a strong commitment to improving and strengthening the relationship between workers and contemporary art; for Vagn Nielsen this endeavour focused on John C. in particular.<sup id=\"footnote-97\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"97\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen (1917\u201386) was an electrician, his wife Alma Nielsen (1918\u20132001) was originally a factory worker and later taught evening classes; Alma\u2019s interest in art began around the age of fifteen, when she became acquainted with Hjalmar Kragh Pedersen, who created decorative paintings for her parents. From 1943 to 1949 the couple lived in a small flat in the Nordvest area of Copenhagen, they later moved to a modern, slightly larger flat in Br\u00f8nsh\u00f8j that they gradually filled with art from floor to ceiling; see more about the collector family in: Abildgaard, Hanne: \u201cKolonihaven p\u00e5 v\u00e6ggen \u2013 Alma og Vagn Nielsens kunstsamling\u201d, in: Arbejderhistorie no. 4, 2002, pp. 95-105.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">97<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Vagn Nielsen first grew interested in art in 1939\u201340 when he attended a series of museum lectures for the unemployed; upon getting back in employment he made his first purchases of art.<sup id=\"footnote-98\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"98\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Nielsen, Vagn: \u201cMit f\u00f8rste billede \u2013 og de sidste\u201d, in: Social-Demokraten 10 June 1950.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">98<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Those purchases were made at Fischer and Krarup\u2019s memorial exhibition in September 1940, where he bought the ink drawing <em>The Artist and his Models<\/em> from 1930 and the etching <em>The Entrance of the Assistens Churchyard<\/em> from 1938.<sup id=\"footnote-99\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"99\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"According to Vagn Nielsen\u2019s inventory of the collection, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">99<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0His John C. collection eventually numbered sixty works, seven of which were paintings; most were small-scale works except for the large <em>Self-Portrait with Figure <\/em>from 1931. Several of the works were bought from the artist\u2019s widow, with whom he established a relationship of mutual trust.<sup id=\"footnote-100\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"100\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"As is apparent from e.g. Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes after a visit to Dagny Christensen 4 November 1949.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">100<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0<strong>[fig.13]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 801px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig14_john_c_vagnnielsen.jpg\" width=\"801\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 14.<\/strong> The living room in Alma and Vagn Nielsen\u2019s flat in the Nordvest area of Copenhagen, 1948. In addition to <em>Self-portrait with figure <\/em>we also see the watercolour <em>Hell<\/em> from 1930 and <em>Still life with flower pots<\/em> from 1926. However, the allotment scene is a reproduction; the original painting from 1935 never came into the Nielsen family\u2019s ownership. It was sold at the auction of\u00a0Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg\u2019s collection in 1943, fetching 1,275 kroner; the highest price achieved among the 193 works there. Photograph from the archives of The Workers\u2019 Museum,\u00a0Copenhagen. Photographer unknown.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Vagn Nielsen would have liked to have known John C. personally and did everything he could to mitigate his sense of loss over this fact. He visited art dealers such as Henning Larsen, he collected photographs and printed material for an ever-growing \u2018John C. archive\u2019, he contacted Max M\u00fcller and Elna Fonnesbech-Sandberg to obtain more information about some of the works in his own collection that had previously belonged to them, and overall he gathered and secured information and documentation that offers a highly valuable and significant supplement to the meagre store of information that would otherwise have been obtainable today. For this he deserves great praise.<\/p>\n<p>Alma and Vagn Nielsen gradually became publicly known as \u2018collectors without deep pockets\u2019, and Vagn wrote about his collecting activities on numerous occasions, seeking to prompt other workers to assign greater priority to acquiring art for their own homes. For him, art represented a counterpart to allotment gardens; they had a similar human and poetic dimension:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>\u201cit is nice to also have an allotment indoors, and I do, the most delightful allotment imaginable. It is always ready to welcome me with the songs of nightingales, flutes and brass bands alike. The pictures on my walls are my allotment garden. The pictures are windows opening up on lovely, lush gardens and doors leading straight into the hearts of others. Such walls are certainly something to be desired.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-101\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"101\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Nielsen, Vagn: \u201cMit f\u00f8rste billede \u2013 og de sidste\u201d, in: Social-Demokraten 10 June 1950.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">101<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Vagn Nielsen regarded the assessments made by art experts about the aesthetic and fiscal value of art as being entirely without interest to \u201ceveryday people\u201d. The couple\u2019s collection centred on John C., Kragh Pedersen and Henry Heerup because those artists \u201clet Man take centre stage. This is not to say that there are always people in their pictures, but they paint Man and the things that matter to us as human beings.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-102\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"102\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Vagn Nielsen\u2019s notes in connection with the TV broadcast \u201cSamlere uden Tegnebog\u201d (Collectors without deep pockets) 5 September1953, ABM.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">102<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Vagn Nielsen\u2019s view of the relationship between art and workers had a certain kinship with the views that prompted the establishment of Arbejdernes Kunstforening (The Worker\u2019s Art Association) in 1936: a firm belief that it was crucially important, in order to lead a good life, that workers should struggle to acquire a share in the values that good art has to offer, just like they had fought to acquire a larger share of the economic values in society.<sup id=\"footnote-103\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"103\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"He was active in Arbejdernes Kunstforening from 1946 when the society recommenced operation after the war.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">103<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Even though the general developments in the labour movement\u2019s cultural politics brought some disappointments in their wake, and even though he presumably did not persuade many workers to collect art with the same enthusiasm that he did, Vagn Nielsen never abandoned his personal cultural project. He happily made his works and archives available for exhibitions, and a bequest in his will ensured that the couple\u2019s entire John C. collection, complete with all documentation, would be donated to a museum once they were both dead.<sup id=\"footnote-104\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"104\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"In 2001 the descendants of Alma and Vagn Nielsen made the decision to make the donation to Arbejdermuseet.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">104<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0<strong>[fig.14]<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The main body of Vagn Nielsen\u2019s collecting efforts took place in the 1950s and 1960s, and the decades that followed have not yielded any significant new insights. The few John C. exhibitions held in later years have all accentuated the site-specific, local context of his oeuvre. This was true of <em>\u201cBarbermaleren\u201d John Christensens arbejder is\u00e6r fra N\u00f8rrebro<\/em> (Works by John Christensen, \u2018The Barber Painter\u2019, especially from N\u00f8rrebro), shown at the Museum of Copenhagen in 1976, and of <em>Barbermaleren John Christensen<\/em> at Formidlingscenter Assistens in 2000. By virtue of its location alone \u2013 the cultural centre at the Assistens Churchyard \u2013 the latter of these two exhibitions accentuated the specific location where the artist\u2019s work was done. The approach was also evident in the catalogue, which conjured up 1930s N\u00f8rrebro in an atmospheric manner; the artist and his work served as the basis for an exercise in folkloristic local history writing.<sup id=\"footnote-105\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"105\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"The main article of the catalogue was the anthropologist Marianne Devantier\u2019s \u201cN\u00f8rrebro i 30\u2019erne. Et stemningsbillede\u201d (N\u00f8rrebro in the 1930s. Some impressions), whereas the art historical aspects were represented by a reprinting of Hans Edvard N\u00f8rreg\u00e5rd-Nielsen\u2019s review of the Copenhagen Museum exhibition in 1976; I am grateful to the exhibition organisers \u2013 architect Henning Nicolaisen and Formidlingscenter Assistens \u2013 for placing their exhibition documents and insights at my disposal while writing this article.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">105<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0In terms of exhibitions, then, John C. has been relegated to the realm of cultural history, which should in no way be regarded as a disparaging assessment. The architect Henning Nicolaisen and Formidlingscenter Assistens went to very great efforts to track down works for a representative exhibition in 2000, but the general interest from art institutions has declined greatly over the years.<\/p>\n<h2>A historiographic comment<\/h2>\n<p>In the 1930s John C. was featured in reference literature as an artist who pointed ahead in time. Leo Swane\u2019s perception of his art has already been accounted for, and Niels Th. Mortensen\u2019s <em>Dansk Billedkunst gennem en Menneskealder<\/em> (Danish Art of the last Generation) from 1939 included John C., who was praised for his innovative and imaginative work as a draughtsman. Mortensen\u2019s overall assessment of the period was that the advent of Expressionism had liberated art from all dogma, introducing complete freedom of expression and paving the way for \u201ca range of gifted, uninhibited, unpretentious painters who seemed to step straight from the barbershop or the classroom into the holiest of holies in the realm of art.\u201d<sup id=\"footnote-106\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"106\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Mortensen, Niels Th. (1939): Dansk Billedkunst gennem en Menneskealder, p. 332.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">106<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Mortensen had a keen eye for the new complexity and diversity that arose on the Danish art scene of the 1930s, and his approach was infused by a kind of pluralism that can still be discerned in Jan Zibrandtsen\u2019s reference work <em>Moderne dansk Maleri<\/em> (Modern Danish Painting) from 1948, which takes the form of a series of biographies and very scanty general summaries. In this book John C. is favourably described as one of the very few true Na\u00efvists in Danish art.<sup id=\"footnote-107\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"107\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Zibrandtsen, Jan (1948): Moderne dansk Maleri, pp. 223-24.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">107<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>After this, John C. had to take a leave of absence from reference books for quite a while. As has been pointed out by the Swedish art historian Hans Hayden, Modernism attained its real impact as an aesthetic and historiographic paradigm during the first decade after World War II. It is true that some avant-garde movements had entered the art institutions in the 1930s, usually now under the term \u2018Modernism\u2019, but it was not until the second half of the twentieth century that Modernism and modern art were emphatically considered one and the same thing; with this move, the evolutionist Modernist narrative focusing on stylistic innovation assumed its dominant position.<sup id=\"footnote-108\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"108\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Hayden (2006), pp. 46, 60-65, 133-134.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">108<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0This narrative was instrumental in bringing about the marginalisation of great sections of the art scene as largely uninteresting to art history, and it has had long-term negative repercussions for interwar art, which had been quite widely bought by art museums at the time, but not yet been made the subject of much research.<\/p>\n<p>The artist and art historian Jens J\u00f8rgen Thorsen\u2019s 1965 book <em>Modernisme i dansk kunst, specielt efter 1940<\/em> (Modernism in Danish Art, particularly after 1940) provided the first major art historical account of the Modernist\/avant-garde movement in Danish art from its earliest beginnings to the present day. It related the story of how Danish Modernism had its wellspring in Vilhelm Lundstr\u00f8m\u2019s \u2018crate pictures\u2019 from 1917\u201319, of how it was continued by the Surrealists associated with the <em>linien<\/em> group and then unfolded to its full extent by the Spontaneous-Abstract artists associated with <em>Helhesten<\/em> and CoBrA. Thorsen reproduced and reinforced the avant-garde groups\u2019 own narratives: the <em>linien<\/em> circle had explained its endeavours as a continuation of Lundstr\u00f8m\u2019s Cubism infused with new psychological aspects, and the artists around <em>Helhesten<\/em> had also pointed back to Lundstr\u00f8m as the founding father of their movement; the only difference being that they interpreted his crate pictures as Dadaist and spontaneous.<sup id=\"footnote-109\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"109\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"linien (Vilhelm Bjerke Petersen): \u201cTil surrealismen\u201d, in: linien January 1934, vol.1, no. 1; Egill Jacobsen: \u201cSaglighed og mystik\u201d, in: Helhesten 1941, vol.1, no. 1.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">109<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>For decades, Danish art history writing regarded the emergence of <em>linien<\/em> in 1934, drawing on ideas from Bauhaus and international Surrealism, as an endeavour that finally picked up the mantle after Vilhelm Lundstr\u00f8m\u2019s montage works, arriving on the scene after almost fifteen years of wandering in the wilderness during which artists had turned their back on the wider art scenes abroad. The period between World War I and the mid-1930s was regarded as a temporary phase characterised by an embarrassing lack of innovation, especially by a complete absence of efforts to follow up on the initiatives that had taken place around the journal <em>Klingen <\/em>(The Blade). This position found forceful expression in the 1970s, for example in Troels Andersen\u2019s contribution to <em>Hus \u2013 billede \u2013 dekoration, 20\u2019erne i Danmark<\/em> (House \u2013 picture \u2013 decoration, the 1920s in Denmark) from 1976:<sup id=\"footnote-110\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"110\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"Andersen, Troels: \u201cOdds \u2013 and ends\u201d, in: Andersen, Troels, Per Kirkeby and Allan de Waal: Hus \u2013 billede \u2013 dekoration, 20\u2019erne i Danmark, Arkitektens Forlag 1976, pp. 49\u201376.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">110<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0he regarded Danish art from the 1920s as problematic because the artists failed to retain an international outlook. Knud Voss\u2019s contribution to <em>Dansk kunsthistorie<\/em> (Danish Art History) (vol. 5, 1975) is also permeated by the concept of a modernist evolution in art; for example, he regards the absence of Dada in Danish art as a problem that may potentially have long-term ramifications \u2013 it is regarded as a natural evolutionary stage that Danish art has neglected to live through. Whereas the reference works from the first half of the century describe the interwar art scene as heterogeneous and characterised by a pluralistic co-existence of different movements, a shift had occurred, assigning the highest position in art\u2019s hierarchy to a \u2018revolutionary spirit\u2019, i.e. avant-garde antagonism; at the same time a corresponding loss in status occurred for all experiments aimed at giving voice to the human condition in modern urban living or at forging closer links between art and a wider audience \u2013 both of which were key concerns for many young artists of the interwar years. Within the narrative that posits modern art as something that is driven by an inherent logic of constant, natural evolution, many of the artists who had been much acclaimed and highly visible during the interwar years quite simply no longer seemed relevant to art history.<\/p>\n<p>However, in the 1990s John C. got a second chance, this time recast as a footnote within what was supposedly a vibrant, flourishing traditionalistic movement on the Danish interwar art scene. In <em>Ny dansk kunsthistorie<\/em> (New Danish Art History) (vol. 7, 1995) Villads Villadsen and Henning J\u00f8rgensen established a new narrative that falls into two separate parts: tradition and Surrealism. This can be said to effect a break with the hegemony of the one-sided narrative of the evolution of art, but it still did not treat avant-garde art and so-called traditional art from the interwar years as part of the same overall history.<sup id=\"footnote-111\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"111\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"What is more, Henning J\u00f8rgensen\u2019s half of Ny dansk Kunsthistorie volume 7 constitutes a kind of summing-up for \u2018traditionalist\u2019 phenomena (from much later periods, too), whereas the avant-garde movements of those periods are addressed in other volumes of the work.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">111<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0John C. makes an appearance in the section on \u201cTradition\u201d, where he is placed in the very margin of things, being mentioned in the same breath as Madsen Ohlsen in the chapter on \u2018the Corner tradition\u2019, specifically under the thematic heading \u201cHjemstavn\u201d (Homeland) \u2013 i.e. associated with depictions of home and hearth.<sup id=\"footnote-112\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"112\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"J\u00f8rgensen and Villadsen (1995), p. 87.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">112<\/a><\/sup>\u00a0Mikael Wivel devotes a little more space to John C. in his <em>Dansk kunst i det 20. \u00e5rhundrede<\/em> (Danish Art in the 20<sup id=\"footnote-113\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"113\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"th\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">113<\/a><\/sup> Century) from 2008. Wivel too wished to counteract the privileged position that had long been attributed to Modernism, seeking for new avenues of approach that might upgrade tradition. In this context John C. was placed within the capacious category \u201cDe utilpassede\u201d \u2013 literally \u2018The Misfits\u2019 or \u2018The Maladjusted\u2019 \u2013 alongside a number of other artists who had been marginalised by art history.<\/p>\n<figure style=\"width: 737px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/03\/fig15_john_c_abm_1245x7.jpg\" width=\"737\" height=\"1080\" data-layout=\"width-50\" \/><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 15.<\/strong> John Christensen: <em>Lamplight<\/em>. 1939. Watercolour, pencil and crayon on paper. 412 x 283 mm. The Workers\u2019 Museum, Copenhagen., inv.no. 1245&#215;7. Photo: Allan Schnipper.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>However, neither of these categories \u2013 traditionalist or misfit \u2013 seems useful as the starting point for a meaningful reinstatement of John C. in art history; he was not at all maladjusted, but very well integrated in the art scene of his day, where many saw him as representing something for which the era had a particular and distinctive need. Focusing on this latter position would make it possible to use him for an examination of values and broader tendencies that were recognised at the time, but have later been rendered invisible by art history. If John C. is to be brought to light from the art museums\u2019 storage facilities and be meaningfully presented in displays and exhibitions, we must abandon the evolutionist narrative about modernism as well as the polarising presentation of avant-garde versus tradition in favour of a narrative about an art scene that grew increasingly complex in the 1930s \u2013 complex in terms of artist groupings, the channels available for the presentation and dissemination of art, potential art buyers, and cultural agendas. The examination of key values found in the reception of John C. in his own day and immediately afterwards points to a context where the artist is associated with a vein of institutionally approved \u2018primitivism\u2019 that celebrated the uninhibited, the immediate and the na\u00efve, but which was quite far removed from the keen interest in \u2018primitive\u2019 peoples and tribes that dominate the main narrative about Primitivism in the 20<sup id=\"footnote-114\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"114\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_3333\" data-sup-value=\"th\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_3333\">114<\/a><\/sup> century. We have also seen that an extra layer was added to the general appreciation of the primitive and autodidact aspects of John C.\u2019s work: the concept of the artist producing and distributing his art as \u2018one of the people\u2019; an approach that linked him to the era\u2019s keen interest in a democratisation of culture in general and the growing awareness of the labour movement and the working class as important new factors within the field of culture.\u00a0<strong>[fig.15]\u200b<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Of course, reassessing and reinstating John C. as relevant today cannot be done by simply reproducing the reception seen in his own day. However, the pluralistic approach of that reception can pave the way for other ways of framing art history\u2019s overall picture of the period, prompting and inspiring art historians to think beyond and across the established distinctions between tradition and the avant-garde. When taking such an approach, it would be natural to use John C. as a springboard for further examining a trend that is urban in its general approach, interested in issues concerning popular appeal and a democratisation of culture, and all-embracing and uninhibited in terms of artistic modes of expression, unfettered by convention and theory. It is, of course, quite natural to consider John C. in relation to other early members of Koloristerne, especially to Hjalmar Kragh-Pedersen, who is now entirely forgotten, but who was widely acclaimed in the interwar years for his Futurist-Expressionist images of the modern human condition in the iron grip of industrialism. However, equally obvious candidates include S\u00f8ren Hjorth Nielsen from Decembristerne, who also focused on city life during the interwar period, particularly on the toilworn, down-at-heel characters one could find in working-class neighbourhoods, and Jens S\u00f8ndergaard from Gr\u00f8nningen, whose images of urban life share many traits with John C.\u2019s works in terms of their angle of approach and figures. One might also include Storm P., a unique and solitary figure on the Danish art scene whose art spanned and embraced the childlike, the morbid and the satirical, and who also leaned towards a certain coarseness and quirkiness in his choice of artistic devices. What is more, it would seem quite obvious to establish a kinship with the artist Henry Heerup; as a young man he lived in the N\u00f8rrebro area quite close to John C.\u2019s barbershop, and he too became the subject of notions about immediacy, accessibility and popular appeal. The fact that Heerup\u2019s works from the interwar years are now usually presented as part of an entirely different narrative, primarily the history and pre-history of CoBrA, is a direct result of the narrative of Modernism and its penchant for categorising artists in accordance with their affiliations with internationally prominent groups. The fact that Heerup contributed to <em>linien<\/em> and later to CoBrA has proven decisive for his position in art history, but when he made a guest appearance with Koloristerne in 1940 this matter has not yet been decided, and at the time he was perceived as having been invited to mitigate the sudden loss of John C.<\/p>\n<p>In a more pluralistic perception of the Danish interwar scene, the group outlined here would not constitute a firmly established entity, but rather one trend alongside at least four or five other trends, including abstraction and Surrealism, landscape painting with a naturalistic and regionally founded approach, a classicist continuation of Cubism and a patriotic vein of academism; these would all constitute other clear trends of the time, each with their own dedicated followers.\u00a0 \u25a2<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>I wish to gratefully acknowledge the Danish Agency for Culture and the Novo Nordisk Foundation for funding during the preparation of this article.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Translation\u00a0by Ren\u00e9 Lauridsen<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The \u2018Barber Painter\u2019 John Christensen went from being a celebrated figure in the Danish art world to being a marginalized character in art history. Here new light is shed on John C. and his role in the art of his time.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":3181,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3333","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-articles"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>\u201cThe Barber Painter\u201d: John Christensen \u2013 a cult figure on the interwar art scene - Perspective<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/the-barber-painter-john-christensen-a-cult-figure-on-the-interwar-art-scene\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"\u201cThe Barber Painter\u201d: John Christensen \u2013 a cult figure on the interwar art scene - Perspective\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The \u2018Barber Painter\u2019 John Christensen went from being a celebrated figure in the Danish art world to being a marginalized character in art history. 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