Place: Stockholm
Born: 1844
Death: 1930
Biography:
Anna Fridrica Wilhelmina von Hallwyl, also known as Wilhelmina von Hallwyl, was a Swedish collector and donor whose accumulation of art and other objects constitute the current Hallwyl Museum in Stockholm. Born on October 1, 1844, in Stockholm, Sweden, she died on July 25, 1930, in the same city.
Wilhelmina was born into a wealthy family, the only child and heiress of the wealthy timber-merchant Wilhelm Kempe of Ljusne-Woxna AB. At the age of 20, she married the Swiss-born Count Walther von Hallwyl (1839–1921), a captain in the Swiss general staff who later became a Swedish citizen.
The Hallwyl Museum showcases Wilhelmina's extensive collection of art and other objects, which includes European and East Asian fine and decorative art, as well as arms and armour, books, and manuscripts. The museum features preserved rooms from the late Victorian period in Sweden, giving visitors a glimpse into the lifestyles of the nobility in Stockholm at the time. For more information about the Hallwyl Museum, please visit: https://Wikioo.org/Art.nsf/Art_EN?Open&Query=hallwyl+museum,hallwyl,museum.
The collection includes works by notable artists such as Paulus Moreelse, whose painting Portrait of a Middle-Aged Man is an exquisite example of Baroque portraiture. Another highlight is the work of Sydney Parkinson, a renowned Scottish artist and naturalist, who created detailed botanical illustrations that would later be used in Joseph Banks' Florilegium.
Wilhelmina's donations included the establishment of the Hallwyl professorship of ethnology at Nordiska museet and Stockholm University. She also arranged for the archaeological investigation and restoration of her husband's ancestral home, Schloss Hallwil, Aargau, for which she established a trust, Hallwil-Stiftung. For more information about Wilhelmina von Hallwyl, please visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelmina_von_Hallwyl.
Wilhelmina von Hallwyl's legacy continues to be celebrated through her collection and donations, which provide a unique insight into the lifestyles of the nobility in Stockholm during the late Victorian period. For more information about the paintings exhibited in the Hallwyl Museum, please visit: https://Wikioo.org/Art.nsf/Art_EN?Open&Query=for+more+information+about+the+paintings+exhibited+in+hallwylska+muséet+stockholm.