Anna Sahlstén


Anna Sofia Sahlstén was a Finnish painter; primarily known for portraits and genre scenes.

Biography

Her father, Claes Vilhelm Sahlstén, was a who later became a writer. When she was eight, her family moved to Helsinki, where she attended a Swedish girls' school; receiving her certificate in 1877. She then studied at the Finnish Society Drawing School from 1877 to 1880, then at a private school operated by Adolf von Becker, from 1880 to 1882.
She then went to Paris, where she studied at the Académie Colarossi, intermittently from 1884-1885 and 1889 to 1890. Her teachers there included Gustave-Claude-Etienne Courtois, and Jean-André Rixens. During a study trip in 1896, she visited Berlin and St. Petersburg.
She began teaching at the age of twenty-one and worked as a secondary school drawing teacher from 1882 to 1926. She co-founded the Finnish Teachers' Drawing Association in 1906 and became its first President, She also created its magazine, Styluksen.
After she retired from teaching, she wrote a two-act for children called Paimen-Pertti ja prinsessa Priscilla. She also developed a program to help children get food at school. In 1929, she executed religious paintings at the church in Leppävaara.
Most of her works are folk scenes of people at work, in church or in their home. She later incorporated humorous elements into her work. Her paintings of coffee-drinking grandmothers have been used by the Paulig company, on a brand of coffee named after her.

Selected paintings