Elof Wedin, a Swedish immigrant who came to the U.S. in 1919, worked for years as an industrial boilermaker. But in his time off, he devoted himself to his passion — art — producing thousands of pieces, and he became a leading modern painter in Minnesota.
The north Minneapolis artist died in 1983 at age 81.
Now, 25 pieces that give a sense for how Wedin's work evolved over his 50-plus-year career can be seen in an exhibit at the Banfill-Locke Center for the Arts in Fridley. "Elof Wedin: A Minnesota Modern" runs through Nov. 29.
Bethany Whitehead, executive director at the Banfill, said the exhibit represents a departure for the center. "Normally, we show living artists we work with and know." Also, the center doesn't usually have the budget for retrospective-type shows, "so this is a special thing," she said.
Wedin had ties to the Isanti County city of Cambridge, and several years ago, his family gifted nearly 300 works to the Cambridge Center for the Arts. The understanding was that some pieces would be exhibited fairly regularly, while others would be sold to support the facility's operating expenses, according to Sharon Howell of the center.
The vast majority of Wedin's works are oil on canvas, though some are oil on fiberglass and others are pastels. "Some paintings are very high impasto style so he used a lot of paint," Howell said.
While the Cambridge center has exhibited his work, it was "excited to move it closer to the metro, to get more of an audience for his exciting career," Whitehead said. The Cambridge center is collaborating with the Banfill on the exhibit.
Whitehead said she had seen Wedin's work before but didn't know much about him.