Ida Matton

[1] She also exhibited her work at the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois.

Another famous work by Matton is the sculpture Loki's Punishment, which dates from 1905 and was executed in marble and exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1909.

In 1923, the marble sculpture was placed in the remains of the Old Riddarholm Bridge, the so-called "Palmstedt's Cave", within the Stockholm City Hall Park.

Another Loki's Punishment was donated by her brother Emil Matton in 1938, on her 75th birthday, to the future Gävleborg Museum.

Matton is represented at, among others, the Nationalmuseum[5] in Stockholm and the County Museum of Gävleborg in Gävle.