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This may seem like an unusual description for the high-end art dealer, who recently died at 92. But in an earlier life, he was a fighter pilot in the Royal Danish Air Force.
“He ripped the roof off a church with the draft,” adds Kristiansen’s daughter Merete. “His mom was really mad at him.”
That was it for his air force career, but he switched gears and went on to become one of Canada’s top art dealers.
Kristiansen’s gallery, the Art Emporium, was the place to buy historic paintings in Vancouver for decades, particularly works by the Group of Seven. Whether you were looking for a work by Tom Thomson, Emily Carr or E.J. Hughes, odds are he had one to sell you. Or two or three.
Kristiansen died July 1 at Vancouver General Hospital with his family at his side. He had lived 12 years after getting a kidney transplant.
Torben Veje Kristiansen was born in Jutland, Denmark, on Nov. 4, 1930. After he left the air force, he became a steward for Scandinavian airlines. In 1956, he was recruited by CP Air, moved to Vancouver and started buying art in Europe and transporting and selling it in Canada.

In 1960, he purchased the Art Emporium, a gallery started by early Vancouver’s top photographer, Philip Timms, in 1897. But he kept flying with CP Air until 1972.
Kristiansen started off showing European works he imported, alongside Canadian artists like Robert Genn and Henri Masson. Within a few years, he was dealing in the Group of Seven and French impressionists.
A natural storyteller with a vibrant personality, he wouldn’t hold back discussing a work.
“He was passionate about art,” said Heffel. “As an orator, he could convey that knowledge and passion with a style that was uniquely his own, and at times mesmerizing.”
Kristiansen’s entry into the Canadian art world coincided with its commercial flowering.
“I remember we had a Lawren Harris (Lake Superior painting) in ’72 for $2,500, ” he told The Vancouver Sun in 2010. “They are way over a million now. In fact, at the Vancouver Art Gallery in ’62 they were $250, and in ’68 they were $1,000.”
Kristiansen would know because in 1976 he held a giant exhibition and sale from the Harris estate, six years after the artist died.
Kristiansen had a knack for being on top of trends. In 1975, his gallery was the first in Vancouver to do a show by the Professional Native Indian Arts group, which included Norval Morrisseau and Daphne Odjig.
He also had a knack in real estate, and owned several buildings on the tony South Granville shopping strip.
In 1982, he proposed building an $8 million art museum on the main floor of an office tower he wanted to build at 1145 West Georgia — a former site of the Vancouver Art Gallery. But the City of Vancouver rejected it.
His gallery made headlines in the spring of 1983 when thieves stole $1 million worth of art from a Burnaby warehouse, including works by Renoir, Gauguin, Degas and Picasso.
The 16 paintings were later found without their frames in the trunk of a car in Burnaby. The day their recovery was announced, Kristiansen said he had sold the Renoir for $500,000 to a museum in Japan.
Kristiansen was married three times and is survived by his wife Patricia, three daughters (Sara, Merete and Sonya), one son (Patrick), two stepsons (Hector and Fabian) and two granddaughters (Anteia and Vya).
“I heard a fellow on the weekend talking about how they were travelling with Torben and were in New York. Torben was riding up the elevator with Patricia, and there were a few other people in the elevator.
“The other people said ‘Hey, are you Hugh Hefner?’ Torben being who he was said ‘Yes, but don’t tell anybody.’”





