
Birgitta Kappe was born in Sweden in 1947 and immigrated to the United States when she was 18. Her love of art manifested itself at an early age, but it wasn’t until her two children were grown that Birgitta began taking classes to fulfill her artistic passion. One day in 1989, as she sat working at her easel on Balboa Island, a woman walked up and offered to purchase her watercolor. Birgitta had never shown her work before, never dreamed of selling it. So to have someone offer to buy the painting “was a big deal!”
Shortly afterwards, Birgitta was invited to join an artist-owned gallery. By the end of the weekend she had sold another painting. It was then that she sensed she was meant to be a painter. After a couple years of working with watercolors, Birgitta began adding other mediums to the paint to enhance its color and texture. She then tried oils and was instantly hooked. The richness of the paint, its opaque and shiny quality, and the way she could manipulate it on the canvas added to the attraction.
Over the ensuing years, Birgitta studied the techniques of such American masters as Windslow Homer, Milford Zornes, Robert E. Woods, and Russian Armenian artist Ovanes Berberian. From each she gleaned a greater passion and keener understanding of her newfound life’s work.
Today Birgitta’s paintings are bold with color. From the cocoa and rusty browns of date palms in an Indian Canyon oasis, or the effervescent lavenders and midnight blues of a Pacific Grove beach, to the vibrant cloistered gardens of California’s missions, Birgitta has put the unique quality of oils to good use. Indeed she is a self-described colorist, preferring bright and forthright to muted tonal variations. To her delight, a faithful and growing following of collectors agree with her choices.