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Arnold Friberg
the
Artist
Biography
Arnold
Friberg, the son of Scandinavian immigrants, was born on December 21,
1913 in Winnetka Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. At the age of 3 Arnold
moved to Arizona with his sister, Gertrude, and his parents. By age 7
young Friberg was already drawing original cartoons. Mr. Friberg
remembers, "I never had to take an aptitude test, I always knew
what I wanted to do, Art". The Fribergs were able to scrape
together enough money to enroll Arnold in a correspondence course at
the age of 10. While in Phoenix Arizona, young Friberg often shared
his drawings with the newspaper staff of the Arizona Republican and he
learned from them. During his high school years, Arnold earned money
by making signs for local businesses. After graduating from high
school, he began his studies at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
While attending the Academy, Arnold worked part-time for printers.
Arnold stayed in the Chicago area for several years and worked in the
commercial art field. It was during this time that he became acquainted
with the Northwest Paper Company and their ad campaign featuring the
Canadian Mounties. Little did he know the importance this would play
in his future. In 1940, Arnold moved to New York City into the
publishing world of Manhattan. While there, he enrolled in night
classes at the Grand Central School of Art, where he studied with
Norman Rockwell under Harvey Dunn, one of the countries top
illustrator.
New York,
Arnold served with the 86th infantry division in world war 11. while
in In the army, he was assigned to scouting trolling,
Friberg served his country. He was discharged in 1946.while in
Chicago, Arnold had met Hedve Baxter, a boarder at the Fribergs' home.
after his discharge from the army, Arnold married Hedve and opened his
own studio in San Francisco. His reputation grew as an illustrator as
he worked on everything from package design to fashion
illustration. In 1948 Arnold accepted a commission to do scenes
of the American West for a calendar series by the Louis F. Dow
Calendar Company. This would become the start of his serious interest
in the West.
By 1950 Arnold and his wife had
moved to Utah, and Arnold started teaching commercial art at the
University of Utah.
During his
teaching a great producer and director Cecil B. De Mille was planning
his immense production of "The Ten
Commandments". De Mille was in need of an artist with both;
the rare talent and inner vision to set down in paint, all of the
power, the color, the human drama . After a long search, which
included Europe, a publisher friend in Sweden sent De Mille prints of
Arnold's scriptural illustrations. De Mille knew he had found his
artist.
This led to
the Fribergs move to Hollywood in 1953. There, Arnold worked with
Cecil B. De Mille for over three years on the epic motion
picture "The Ten Commandments" as his chief
artist and designer. Arnold worked closely with De Mille to visualize,
through hundreds of sketches and paintings, a variety of scenes and
human characters for the motion picture. Arnold Fribergs' 15 paintings
for "The Ten Commandments" became the pictorial
basis for the movie's scenes, characters and costumes, which earned
him an Academy Award Nomination.
The paintings,
when unveiled, toured the world, allowing millions to view them. Cecil
B. De Mille estimated that ;when "The Ten Commandment"
paintings toured the world, they were seen by more people than any
other paintings except for some of the most celebrated masterpieces
such as the 'Mona Lisa,' 'Nightingale,' and 'The Last Supper.'
De Mille also stated that, "Among the living artists who have
dedicated their talents largely to religious art, Arnold Friberg
stands out for his virility and warmth, dramatic understanding and
truth. He has accomplished a strong and real service in bringing the
truth of the Bible to a wider understanding, appreciation, and
acceptance." In the field of traditional realistic
paintings, Arnold Friberg stands alone as the greatest living
interpreter of Scriptural subjects.
In 1968 the Chevrolet Motor Company,
a division of General Motors, commissioned Mr. Friberg to do a series
of paintings depicting the most famous games in the history of
American intercollegiate football. These paintings were used during
the 1969 advertising campaign and were among the most demanding and
exciting pieces Mr. Friberg had done. His extensive research included
visiting the Notre Dame Stadium and locker room where Knute Rockne had
coached. These paintings were such a success that they were taken on
tour and shown at universities throughout the country.
Mr. Friberg also has great
respect for the Native American culture and a reverence for the land
and people of the early west, which is apparent in his work. Some of
his most fascinating scenes are those in his "Saloon"
paintings, the first of which he did in 1977 for Steven A. Wynn, the
owner of the Golden Nugget Casino in Las Vegas. Before undertaking
that painting, Mr. Friberg did extensive research. He studied old
glass - negative photos of old time saloons, visited old saloons, and
investigated the type of people who frequented them. He realized that
rather than being "Dens of Iniquity", saloons were merely
social gathering spots, and he painted them as such, using great
detail in his portrayal. He even recreated actual authentic paintings
found on the walls in those old saloons. "I photographed those
pictures in old saloons and museums", said Mr. Friberg,
"then I put the final picture together like I was designing a
movie set in order to make as complete a statement of an old western
saloon as possible. "And", said Friberg, "I like to
give people a lot to look at so they don't tire of looking at
it."
Throughout his career, Mr. Friberg has painted a variety of themes:
railroads and wagon trains, mountain men and miners, Indians and
religious figures, the U.S. Calvary and the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police, canoes and sailing ships, wildlife and horses. But, if he is
to be known for anything, he hopes it is the horse. Mr. Friberg prides
himself in the detail he uses, especially the detail he uses in his
paintings of horses. One of his largest and favorite
pieces, painted in 1975, is of George Washington kneeling in prayer
beside his horse at Valley Forge. Originally painted to honor our
country's Bi-centennial year, "The Prayer at Valley Forge"
in the past 20 years has become increasingly cherished and recognized
as a supreme 20th century masterpiece of patriotic American art. In it
we feel the cold, the suffering, and the weight of the burden falling
on that tall and lonely man, driven to his knees there in the bitter
snows of Valley Forge. This picture, marking a bold rejection of
fleeting artistic and political "fashions", now expresses a
powerful affirmation of faith, patriotic duty, and the deep spiritual
depths in the founding of our country.
To prepare for this painting, to
insure accuracy in trees and landscape, Mr. Friberg made a pilgrimage
to Valley Forge, in the dead of winter. "In the summer the place
is filled with visitors", said Mr. Friberg, "but now, in the
snows of February, it was deserted, the wind moaning through the great
trees, silent, lonely, cold. It was a cold that chilled to the bone. A
cold that froze my fingers until I could no longer sketch or even snap
my camera. To insure accuracy in man-made things, I sought out
whatever museums, collections, libraries, or informed individuals who
could offer details on horse gear or uniform. At the Smithsonian
Military History Museum, I made minutely accurate sketches from the
very uniform actually worn by Washington As for facial likeness, I
studied every portrait ever sketched, carved, or painted from life,
but always keeping in mind how cold and rawboned he must have looked
during that winter encampment. But such research, vital as it is,
provides only physical facts. What I really tried for, through the
medium of paint, was to recall the pain, and the cold of that cruel
winter of 1777-78. I sought to pay tribute to the tall and
heavy-burdened man who held our struggling nation together."
 Arnold Friberg learned to paint
horses when he began painting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the
late 1930's for the Northwest Paper Company Calendars. To date, he has
done almost 300 Mountie paintings, which has earned him a special
place among his subjects. He is the only American who has ever been
made an honorary member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. In 1978 as a result of his work
with the Mounties, he was commissioned to do an almost life-size
portrait of H.R.H. Prince Charles with his great horse
"Centennial", the great-grandson of Man-O-War. This was done
at a studio in the Buckingham Palace. Then in 1990, Mr. Friberg and
his wife was invited back to spend another six weeks residing in the
Buckingham Palace in diligent preparatory sittings and studies for his
commissioned undertaking of a splendid equestrian portrait of Queen
Elizabeth II and Centennial. Being commissioned to paint these royal
portraits would mean that Mr. Fribergs' name would be included in a
list with such great artists as; Rembrandt, Velazquez, Raphael,
Rubens, Van Dyck and numerous other masters who had painted portraits
of the Royal family. Mr. Friberg describes himself as a storyteller.
"That's all I've ever wanted to do, that's why I went into
illustrating." Mr. Friberg now works from his studio in Salt Lake
City. "Art to me is a service, to bring enrichment to people's
lives. That's why I want my art to be perfectly understood. One of the
things I work for is clarity. That doesn't mean hard-edged forms,
but clarity of the picture, what time of day, what kind of lighting,
where it is."
In recognition of his spiritual, royal and
other historical paintings, Arnold Friberg was made a life member of
the ancient and honorable Royal Society of Arts, London, which
accounts for the initials R.S.A. after his name. And while his
paintings are realistic and historically correct, it is Mr. Fribergs'
extraordinary ability to capture not only the drama of history, but
also the vibrancy and inner strength of human characteristics that
have earned him the respect and recognition as one of the greatest
master painters of modern times. Be clear, "I hope no one ever has to
explain my picture."
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