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Ville Jais Nielsen


Vilhelmine "Ville" Jais Nielsen (née Oppenheim; 1 May 1886 – 7 November 1949) was a Danish painter, the wife of painter and cermanist Jais Nielsen. She is remembered for the many portraits of women she painted while in Sweden during the Second World War, marked by strong brushstrokes and sensitive lighting effects.

She was born in Randers, the daughter of the merchant Carl Oppenheim and Jeanette Cohn. Her training included the Art School for Women (1905–07); an apprenticeship with the silversmith Georg Jensen (1909); and porcelain painting at Bing & Grøndahl (1910–12). She was a student of Othon Friesz in Paris (1912), Harald Giersing in Copenhagen (1913), and Henrik Sørensen in Oslo (1914).

She was the sister of architect Albert Oppenheim, the wife of the painter and ceramist Jais Nielsen, and the mother of the architect Henrik Jais-Nielsen.

Like most of her contemporaries, her early work was in the Fauvism and Cubism styles, with strongly contrasting colours, often influenced by Harald Giersing's use of black. Her later work, especially her portraits, was much lighter.

As a Jew, she had to leave Denmark for Sweden in the Second World War where she painted a large number of interiors and portraits of women (1943–1945), with marked sensitivity to the effects of lighting. She also painted landscapes, including some of Bornholm. The strong brushstrokes given them an ornamental effect. In 1949, she and her husband spent some time in Vence in the south of France where she painted some of her finest works. After returning to Denmark, she died a few months later in Gentofte when she was only 63.


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