Rikard Magnussen

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Rikard Magnussen (2 April 1885 26 May 1948) was a Danish sculptor and writer.

Magnussen was born on 2 April 1885 in Copenhagen, the son of bookkeeper Sophus Oscar Magnussen (18491926) and Christiane Marie Weybøll (18531930). He completed his schooling in 1903. He was then trained as a sculptor, first for eight months under Elna Borch in 1904 and then under Stephan Sinding. He later worked on an off for Vilhelm Bissen 1913.[1]

Career

Magnussen was a strong defender of the naturalistic style at a time when modernism came to play a still more dominant role on the art scene.

He was a member of Charlottenborg's censor committee and a board member both of Dansk Billedhugger Samfund, Kunstforeningen af 18. November and Foreningen for National Kunst, He was an art critic at København (192026), Nationaltidende and other newspapers. He was a member of Foreningen til Hovedstadens Forskønnelse in 192842 and served as its president in 1929–34.[1]

His writings included his memoirs Billedhugger-Minder (1933), monographies about Janus la Cour (1928), Carl Bloch (1931), Christian Molsted (1935), Svend Hammershøi (b. 1936) and Godfred Christensen (I-II, 1939–41) as well as I Thorvaldsens Livsanskuelse (1936) about Bertel Thorvaldsen and Søren Kierkegaard set udefra (1942). He was editor of National Kunst (1940) and Danmarks nationale Malerkunst (1941).[1]

Personal life

List of works

References

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