Helena Hernmarck is a Swedish tapestry artist who lives and works in the United States. She is best known for her monumental tapestries designed for architectural settings.
Early life and education
Hernmark's parents were Carl Hernmarck, curator of decorative arts at the Swedish National Museum of Fine Arts, and Kerstin Simon, a journalist. Her uncle, Swedish modernist architect Sven Markelius, was one of five authors of the modernist manifesto, Acceptera, published in 1931. Hernmarck studied weaving in Stockholm, first at the Swedish Association of Friends of the Textile Arts, and later at Sweden’s University College of Arts, Crafts and Design. Her primary teacher was Swedish textile artist :sv:Edna Martin|Edna Martin. She apprenticed with textile designer Alice Lund.
Hernmarck was among the first tapestry artists to use photographs as the basis for her designs, which rely on optical illusions to create photorealistic effects. Her work in the 1960s reflected the influence of pop culture with tapestries such as Newspapers woven from a composition of newspaper clippings and Little Richard simulating a 7 by 8 foot album cover. In the 1970s, Hernmarck began working from enlarged color photographs, rendering the effects of light on water in tapestries such as Sailing, which was produced for the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Her 1990 Urn, a tromp l'oeil tapestry made for Philip Johnson’s Peachtree Tower in Atlanta, Georgia, replicates elements of the surrounding architecture. Hernmarck has also used paper collages, watercolors, and photographic details as the basis for her designs. Hernmarck’s technique differs from traditional gobelin tapestry weaving in that it uses texture, color, and value contrast to establish line, rather than sharp lines and patterns. Before each major commission, Hernmarck works with :sv:Wålstedts Textilverkstad|Wålstedts mill in Dala-Floda, Sweden to spin and dye yarn. Some of Hernmarck's tapestries are woven, with assistants, at her studio in Connecticut. Others are subcontracted to :sv:Alice Lund|Alice Lund’s Textile Studio in Dalarna, Sweden.
Prins Eugens Waldemarsudde Museum, Stockholm, Sweden 1999
Zornsamlingarna, Mora, Sweden, 2001
American Swedish Institute, Minneapolis, MN 2012
Selected group exhibitions
Liljvalchs Gallery, Stockholm, Sweden “Form Fantasi”, 1964 Musee Cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne, Switzerland, 1965 "The 2nd, 3rd and 4th International Tapestry Biennales”, 1967 & 1969 Victoria & Albert Museum, London, England, “The Craftsman's Art", 1973 The National Museum, Stockholm, Sweden "Tre Temperament i Vav", 1976 American Craft Museum, New York City, "Craft Today: The Poetry of the Physical", 1986–88, “Architectural Art Affirming the Design Relationship”, 1988 Washington University Gallery of Art in Conjunction with Craft Alliance, St. Louis "Tales and Traditions, Storytelling in 20th Century American Craft, 1993 American Textile History Museum, Lowell, Mass. “Generations/Transformations American Fiber Art”, 2003 Textile Museum, Washington DC, “Sourcing the Museum”, 2012
Selected corporate commissions
Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, Washington, 1970–71 Case Western Reserve University Law School, Cleveland, Ohio, 1971 Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, 1973 and 1975 John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, Boston, Massachusetts, 1973–75 Federal Reserve Bank, Boston, Massachusetts, 1976 Cecil H. Green Library, Stanford University, Stanford, California, 1979 Pitney Bowes, Stamford, Connecticut, 1984 Kellogg's Company, Battle Creek, Michigan, 1986 PepsiCo, Inc., Purchase, New York, 1990 Main Post Office, Stockholm, Sweden 1995 Time Warner Center, One Central Park Lobby, New York, NY 2003–2006 Purdue University, School of Visual and Performance Art, Indiana 2010 The Margaret A. Cargill Foundation, Eden Prairie, MN 2011 The American Swedish Institute, Minneapolis, MN 2006 and 2012
Awards and recognition
American Institute of Architects Craftsmanship Medal, 1973
American Craft Council, College of Fellows, 1996
Connecticut Commission on the Arts, Governor’s Arts Award, 1998
Constantine, M., & Larsen, J. L.. Beyond craft: the art fabric. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co.
Hernmarck, H., Boman, M., Malarcher, P., Brummer, H. H., & Dunlap, R.. Helena Hernmarck: Tapestry artist. Stockholm: Byggförlaget. Seattle: University of Washington Press.