NEW ORLEANS, LA.- Designer Bror Anders Wikstrom (18541909), a Swedish émigré, made a name for himself in New Orleans by engaging with the heart of the Crescent Citys culture: Mardi Gras. In celebration of Wikstroms artistry, the
New Orleans Museum of Art presents Bror Anders Wikstrom: Bringing Fantasy to Carnival, on view from December 14, 2017 through April 1, 2018. The exhibition showcases highlights from Wikstroms Mardi Gras float and costume designs, including a full set of twenty float plates from the Krewe of Proteus 1904 The Alphabet parade and the only known bound set of float designs for the Krewe of Rex 1910 "The Freaks of Fable" parade.
At the turn of the century, Wikstrom elevated the extravaganza of carnival through his fantastical designs for early Mardi Gras krewes, serving as the chief designer behind twenty floats and hundreds of costumes with Rex, and then with Proteus. Bringing Fantasy to Carnival shows watercolor sketches for the elaborate floats and costumes that allowed otherworldly stories to come to life on the streets of New Orleans. The exhibition shows Wikstroms designs as early sketches, as final design plates, and as illustrated in newspaper parade bulletins. Photographs show how these creations looked rolling through the streets on Mardi Gras day.
We are delighted to showcase Wikstroms imaginative designs as part of NOMAs year-long Tricentennial celebration, said Susan Taylor, NOMAs Montine McDaniel Freeman Director. Wikstroms creative influences led to the foundation of our museum. He was so renowned in New Orleans that his name was inscribed on the architectural frieze above NOMAs doors, together with the likes of Audubon, Whistler, and Copley, who signified great art to our 1910 founders. Bror Anders Wikstrom was a founder of the New Orleans Artists Association in 1885, one of the
civic groups that sparked the Delgado Museum of Art (now NOMA) in 1910. The artist was active in the New Orleans artistic scene from 1883 until 1909 as a marine and landscape painter, cartoonist, and organizer of the art community, but is best beloved today for his hundreds of captivating carnival designs. Many of the best of these drawings are part of Tulane University's Louisiana Research Collection "Carnival Collection," which together with several private collections form the core of this NOMA exhibition.
"One sees our creative culture come alive during Carnival season, when everyone in New Orleans, whether with a krewe or not, uses wigs and costumes to try on a dramatic alter ego," said Mel Buchanan, NOMA's RosaMary Curator of Decorative Arts & Design. "These drawings show the roots of this community spectacle through Wikstrom's endless imagination for costumed characters within evocative scenes. You'll see everything from Rex regalia - neoclassical crowns and scepters, to flower-adorned fairies that bring whimsy and mischief to Mardi Gras day."