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Kurt Ard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kurt Ard (born December 1925 in Copenhagen, died June 2026)[1] was a Danish illustrator, painter, and graphic artist. He became internationally known for his cover image artworks for newspapers and magazines in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, especially for the Scandinavian magazines Allers and Familie Journal as well as for the German Hörzu.[2]

In 1950 Ard followed his emigrating family to California, and thereafter began his career in New York City working on various small magazines. Ard was a name that Kurt Savigny Nørstrand took when he lived in the United States, derived from 'art'.[3] Ard worked in the same realistic painterly tradition as the American illustrator Norman Rockwell (1894–1978). In 1953, Ard returned to Denmark, and four years later achieve a breakthrough with cover illustrations for, among others, Hörzu. He was self-taught and similarly to Rockwell, stylistically simple, however he has received praise for his often folksy and humorous cover artworks. Like Rockwell, Ard's artistic inspirations drawn from everyday life have been criticised as overly sentimental and kitschy.[4]

His 1960/1961 work “Cowboy Asleep in Beauty Salon” sold on Christie’s for $126,000 USD on April 21, 2023.[5] He worked, among others, for Scandinavian weekend magazines as well as for the American Saturday Evening Post, Reader’s Digest and McCall’s. For Hörzu, Ard completed 260 cover images.

Ard was a member of the Danske populærautorer and wrote music and lyrics for the song Mon Cœur, which in Demark’s 1966 Melodi Grand Prix (precursor to the Eurovision Song Contest) placed second.[6] In 1971, Ard moved to Spain, where he lived until his death in June 2026.[7]

References

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  1. ^ "Kurt Ard er død – forsidernes konge blev 100 år". Familie Journal (in Danish). 2026-06-26. Retrieved 2026-06-27.
  2. ^ https://www.christies.com/en/private-sales/exhibitions/exhibition-05dd7662-0e6d-4905-aa23-bfa58b09d56b/overview
  3. ^ https://arkivalieronline.rigsarkivet.dk/da/billedviser?bsid=103854#103854,16404713
  4. ^ Kurt Ard bio at HENI
  5. ^ KURT ARD (b. 1925): Cowboy Asleep in Beauty Salon.
  6. ^ Eurovisionworld.com, Melodi Grand Prix 1966: Susie Faber - "Mon cœur"
  7. ^ "Kurt Ard er død – forsidernes konge blev 100 år". Familie Journal (in Danish). 2026-06-26. Retrieved 2026-06-27.

Selected books

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  • Kurt Ard – so gesehen... Cora Verlag, Hamburg 2004, ISBN 978-3-89941-300-7.
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