Lili Elbe

Danish painter
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Also known as: Einar Wegener, Ejner Wegener
Quick Facts
Birth name:
Einar Wegener
Einar also spelled:
Ejner
Born:
December 28, 1882, Vejle, Denmark
Died:
September 13, 1931, Dresden, Germany (aged 48)

Lili Elbe (born December 28, 1882, Vejle, Denmark—died September 13, 1931, Dresden, Germany) was a Danish painter who was assigned male at birth, experienced what is now called gender dysphoria, and underwent the world’s first documented sex reassignment surgery.

Born Einar Wegener, Elbe lived nearly her whole life as a man. Beginning early in the first decade of the 20th century, Elbe (then Wegener) studied art at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen and met Gerda Gottlieb there. The two fell in love and got married about 1905. According to the book Elbe wrote—though it was credited to her friend Ernst Ludwig Hathorn Jacobson under the pseudonym Niels Hoyer—about her transition to a transgender woman (Fra Mand til Kvinde [1931; Man into Woman]), she realized her true gender identity when Gerda—a successful painter and fashion illustrator (as well as illustrator of lesbian erotica)—asked her then husband to don women’s clothing and sit as her model. Wegener was her regular model thereafter. The couple eventually moved to Paris, where Wegener felt free to appear in public sometimes as Einar Wegener and sometimes as Lili Elbe. In 1924 her work—which included landscapes, interior scenes, still lifes, and portraits—was shown in Paris at the Salon d’Automne and the Salon des Indépendants. Once Wegener began to transition, she and Gerda had their marriage annulled.

The first of five highly experimental surgeries that Elbe underwent was performed in 1930. Preceding the surgery, which was performed by German gynecologist Kurt Warnekros, she was examined by German physician and sexuality theorist Magnus Hirschfeld. The series of operations removed her testicles and penis and then transplanted ovaries and a uterus into her. She died of complications not long after the fifth procedure in 1931. Before she underwent her first surgery, it had been determined by her physicians (possibly by Hirschfeld) that Elbe had more female than male hormones and likely had what is now known as Klinefelter syndrome, a disorder of the sex chromosomes that occurs in males. The story of her transition was published shortly after her death (with pseudonyms applied to all people named in the book) and has since been retold in The Danish Girl (2000), a novel by David Ebershoff, and a major feature film by the same name (2015) starring Eddie Redmayne.

Tate Modern extension Switch House, London, England. (Tavatnik, museums). Photo dated 2017.
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