Portrait of Honour 2023
The 2023 Portrait of Honour depicts the geneticist and Nobel laureate Svante Pääbo. Painted in oil on canvas by Sixten Sandra Österberg, the portrait joins the collection of the Swedish National Portrait Gallery and will be unveiled at Gripsholm Castle 28 October.
The Swedish National Portrait Gallery collection is added to every year with a number of works, including the Portrait of Honour – a painting of a deserving Swedish woman or man.
The portrait joins the collection of the Swedish National Portrait Gallery.
Visit Gripsholm Castle
The portrait
Svante Pääbo (born 1955) has long been one of Sweden’s most prominent and internationally renowned scientists. A specialist in evolutionary genetics, he has been involved in groundbreaking discoveries regarding the history of human evolution. In 2007, Pääbo was named as one of the world’s most influential people by Time magazine, and in late 2022 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine “for his discoveries concerning the genomes of extinct hominins and human evolution”.
Through his research, Pääbo seeks to answer the question of why Homo sapiens, rather than Neanderthals or one of the other early human species, spread around the world and eventually developed into the advanced civilisation we know today. In 1999 he became the founding director of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, where he continues to pursue his research.
The artist
The portrait of Svante Pääbo has been painted in oil on canvas by Sixten Sandra Österberg (born 1990), who graduated from the Royal Institute of Art in early 2022 and soon won plaudits for a painting style that oscillates between realism and abstraction. Human bodies are usually the main subject of her works. She takes a methodical approach, producing elaborate compositions, while her paintings often create a very immediate impression.
Österberg began working on the portrait of Pääbo during a visit to the Max Planck Institute in early summer 2023. She has portrayed him in the setting where he was working – and the clothes he was wearing – when she visited. The portrait is remarkably unconventional and informal, showing Pääbo sitting on a simple stool in a location that is merely hinted at. Laboratory equipment can be discerned in the background. Österberg lives and works in Stockholm, where she has had solo exhibitions at Andréhn-Schiptjenko, Konstnärshuset and CF Hill. She has also taken part in several group exhibitions and is represented in the Moderna Museet collection.
The portrait gallery
The Swedish National Portrait Gallery is the world's oldest national portrait gallery. This is also one of the world's largest portrait galleries, and currently includes approximately 5,000 works, mostly oil paintings, of which Gripsholm Castle houses more than 800.
This year marks the bicentenary of the Swedish National Portrait Gallery, founded in 1822. It is managed by Nationalmuseum.