Reidar Aulie (13 March 1904 – 23 November 1977) was a Norwegian artist.[1]
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Reidar Aulie was born in Oslo, the son of Nils Baltazar Aulie (1867–1951) and Martha Valstad (1872–1966). He grew up in a middle class home in Oslo. Reider Aulie was the younger brother of Andreas Aulie (1897-1990), a lawyer who was the Norwegian attorney general (Norges riksadvokat) from 1946 until 1967. Aulie graduated in 1927 and traveled to Paris in the autumn with fellow student, Bjarne Ness, who died of tuberculosis just before Christmas that year, only 25 years old. His death made a strong impression on the younger Aulie who had shared lodgings with Ness. Aulie debut at the Autumn Exhibition (Høstutstillingen) in 1927. Aulie already had in the 1930s, illustrated books by such authors as Ingeborg Refling Hagen and Martin Andersen Nexø.
As a young progressive and intellectual artist, Aulie sided with the labor movement within the national political struggle. Auli paintings are full of symbolism. There is often rooms for several interpretations. Aulie was always concerned with the common man and portrayed him with great enthusiasm. In the 1930s he became an artist for the Socialist movement. In 1932 he participated in the Anti-War Conference in Amsterdam the same year and was chairman of the Anti-War Committee in Oslo and the surrounding area. In 1936 Aulie built house and studio on Maridalsveien Street in Oslo, where he lived the rest of his life[2]
He became best known for the art produced during the Second World War. Aulie had a significant production in the years 1940-45, during periods spent in hiding out on a small farm owned by his in-laws in Eidsberg. Auli main production year was 1943, when he painted the important war pictures of subjects that would not be tolerated German censorship. His notable work, entitled 9. april 1940, tells about the invasion which resulted in the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. In the winter of 1945 he was sent to Grini concentration camp.[3]
In 1950 he painted Arbeiderbevegelsens historie, a fresco of the labor movement's history, in Oslo City Hall. His last two decades were marked by the teaching duties, first as professor from 1958 and later as rector from 1965 at the Norwegian National Academy of Fine Arts. In 1964, he received the Prince Eugen Medal, a Swedish medal awarded by the King of Sweden for outstanding artistic work.[4][5]
In 1933 Reidar Aulie married Kari (Gunvor Katarina) Randem (1908–1994).