Helle Thorborg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Helle Thorborg | |
|---|---|
| Born | April 12, 1927 Gentofte, Denmark |
| Education | Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts |
| Known for | Painting, graphic design, illustration |
| Notable work | Decoration of the pulpit, Gimsing Church (1988) |
| Movement | Colourism (Koloristerne) |
| Spouse | Carl Henry Beckmann |
| Children | Gertrud (1956), Laurids Reidar (1957), Marius Ingvar (1959) |
| Awards | Tagea Brandt Rejselegat (1981); Eckersberg Medal (1990); Anne Marie Telmányi Prize (1994) |
Helle Thorborg (born 12 April 1927) is a Danish painter and graphic designer. In her colour graphics, she uses strong contrasts creating images resembling collages. She has decorated a number of Danish buildings, including the pulpit in Gimsing Church near Struer, and has designed scenery for the Folketeatret's experimental stage.[1][2]
Born on 12 April 1927 in Gentofte, Helle Thorborg was the daughter of the parliamentary secretary Johannes Levinsen Thorborg (1896–1992) and Grete Fog (1903–1993). She was brought up in an academic environment. Despite the scepticism of her family, she was set on becoming an artist. From 1947 to 1954, she attended the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, studying painting and graphics under Aksel Jørgensen and Holger J. Jensen. In 1954, she married the architect Carl Henry Beckmann with whom she had three children, Gertrud (1956), Laurids Reidar (1957) and Marius Ingvar (1959).[2]