Erik Artur Olson (Ohlson, Olsson) (born 9 May 1901 in Halmstad), married in 1929 to Solvig Sven-Nilsson, died in 1986, a painter, illustrator, graphic artist, sculptor, theater decorator, member of Halmstadgruppen.
Brother of artist Axel Olson.
Olson is represented, for example, at the National Museum and the Museum of Modern Art.
Erik Olson is known as a Swedish surrealist.
He devoted himself to dream-like, over realistic artwork.
Olson [1] grew up in Halmstad.
After school he started to work as a company copier.
In the evenings he cultivated his main interest, drawing and painting, by studying at Halmstad Technical School.
His father had hoped for the son to be an engineer, but Olson, as well as the two year older brother Axel Olson and cousin Waldemar Lorentzon, participated in 1919 in an amateur show in Halmstad secondary school.
In the summer of 1919, they met the established artist Gosta Adrian-Nilsson (GAN).
This meeting influenced them strongly, impressed by his painting and his art theories.
In 1924 Olson went to Paris together with Waldemar Lorentzon.
The same year he became a co-founder of Halmstadgruppen.
Late in the year 1930, he painted 'Handsken är kastad', (gloves are off), which is considered to be his first surrealist work.
Olson lived for periods in both France and Denmark.
Starting in the 1930s, his works participated at exhibitions in, for example, Copenhagen, London, Paris and New York.
He mostly spent his summers on the coast of Halland where he participated in Söndrumskolonin during the 1940s.
In 1950 Olson converted to Catholicism and spent some of his later years rediscovering religious art.
He also created several stained glass windows for various churches.
One example is the stained glass in the choir in Sofia Albertina church in Landskrona and the windows of the St Maria catholic church in Halmstad.