



107
Peter Ilsted
Mother and Child (Interiør fra et fiskerhjem i Hornbæk)
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Peter Ilsted
Danish | B. 1861 D. 1933A key figure of the Danish Interior School trained in both painting and printmaking, Peter Illsted contributed to a quietly refined vision of domestic life that prioritized stillness, light, and compositional balance. Illsted developed a distinctive practice in which intimate interior scenes—often drawn from his own home—transformed into vehicles for exploring atmosphere and spatial harmony rather than narrative alone. In 1891, Ilsted’s sister Ida married the painter Vilhelm Hammershøi (1864–1916), whose restrained aesthetic significantly shaped Ilsted’s practice. His compositions likewise favor spare interiors rendered in muted tones, often with a lone figure viewed from behind. After 1909, Ilsted’s turn toward etching and hand-colored mezzotint allowed him to translate the contemplative qualities of his painted interiors into graphic form, reinforcing his reputation for technical precision and tonal subtlety. Exhibited widely in Denmark, Europe, and the United States during his lifetime, Ilsted achieved significant contemporary recognition, his work understood today as central to Nordic surveys of domestic modernity, particularly between the late nineteenth to early twentieth century.