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Paintings of Norwegian Fjords 1900-28

By: hoakley
6 July 2025 at 19:30

On the second day of this weekend’s visit to the fjords of Norway, we’ve reached the twentieth century, and a pupil of Eilert Adelsteen Normann (1848-1918).

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Elisabeth Grüttefien-Kiekebusch (1871-1954), Fjord Landscape (date not known), oil on canvas, 80 x 120 cm, Private collection. Wikimedia Commons.

Clearly inspired by Normann’s views of the fjords, Elisabeth Grüttefien’s style is quite distinct, as shown in her undated Fjord Landscape. Her greens are more vibrant, and there are some fluffy red patches in her blue sky.

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Elisabeth Grüttefien-Kiekebusch (1871-1954), Fjord with steamer (c 1900), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

In her Fjord with Steamer from about 1900, she includes a sailing boat and one of the larger steamships, just as might have appeared in Normann’s paintings.

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Elisabeth Grüttefien-Kiekebusch (1871-1954), Fjord Landscape (c 1900), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

She also found some different motifs. In Fjord Landscape, also from about 1900, it is spring, and there’s still plenty of snow left from the winter. Groups of birch trees have yet to come into leaf.

Sadly, Elisabeth Grüttefien then vanished, and her paintings stopped.

Nikolai Astrup, the last landscape artist in this series, spent most of his life in the hamlet of Jølster, to the north of Sognefjord, where his father was the parish priest. He trained under two great Norwegian painters, Harriet Backer and Christian Krogh, and under Lovis Corinth in Berlin. Unlike the previous artists, Astrup was no visitor to the fjords, he lived among them.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), Kollen (The Fell) (1905-06), oil on canvas, 100.2 x 120.3 cm, Bergen Kunstmuseum, KODE, Bergen, Norway. Wikimedia Commons.

Kollen, translated as The Barren Mountain, or simply The Fell, (1905-06) shows one of the huge rocky outcrops towering over the coast of fjords and lakes in this part of Norway. Astrup must have painted this during the late winter.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), Funeral Day in Jølster (before 1908), oil on canvas, 68 x 73 cm, Bergen Kunstmuseum, KODE, Bergen, Norway. The Athenaeum.

Astrup recorded the public rites of the community, as in his Funeral Day in Jølster (before 1908). With the grandeur of the hills behind, a small party escorts the coffin of one of the villagers. His father, the pastor, leads the procession to the small churchyard, a rite that had taken place many times over the preceding centuries, and was to follow the artist’s own early death in 1928.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), Grey Spring Evening (before 1908), oil on canvas, 98.2 x 106.2 cm, Bergen Kunstmuseum, KODE, Bergen, Norway. The Athenaeum.

Grey Spring Evening (before 1908) is one of Astrup’s finest paintings of Jølster Lake. In its suffuse light, the hill dominating the opposite bank has rich earths and a shallow strip of green fields near the water’s edge. The pale green spring foliage on the trees in the foreground is muted, and a rowing boat out in the middle of the lake seems a tiny speck lost in the midst of nature.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), A June Night and Old Jølster Farm (before 1911), oil on canvas, 88 x 105 cm, Private collection. The Athenaeum.

Jølster Lake is fed from meltwater from Jostedalsbreen, and there’s still abundant snow on the mountains in Astrup’s view of A June Night and Old Jølster Farm, with its lush carpet of marsh marigolds.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), Kari – Motif from Sunde (c 1918), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Private collection. The Athenaeum.

His prints clearly influenced his painting style. Kari – Motif from Sunde (c 1918) shows an elfin figure of a girl who has been painted as if in an illustration, or perhaps one of Carl Larsson’s popular albums.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), The Cold Frame Mound (c 1921-28), oil on canvas, 77 x 108 cm, Private collection. The Athenaeum.

The Cold Frame Mound (c 1921-28) reveals the Astrup family vegetable garden by their house at Sandalstrand, including the ‘cold frame’ of the title. Despite their name, cold frames actually protect plants from the cold, and are used to enable earlier starting of vegetable crops. Sinking the cold frame into the ground (and siting it on a high point) protects its contents from ground frosts, while covering it with glazed windows ensures that daylight can raise the air and soil temperatures within it.

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Nikolai Astrup (1880–1928), The Befring Mountain Farms (c 1924-28), oil on canvas with woodblock printing, 89 x 110 cm, Private collection. The Athenaeum.

For much of his career, Astrup’s prints and paintings had informed and influenced one another; The Befring Mountain Farms (c 1924-28) is an example of his mixing the media in a single work, coupling woodblock printing with oil painting. It shows an extended series of farm buildings not far from Jølster Lake.

Astrup uses the natural environment to generate one of his most magical works. Two people are engaged in milking a goat by the entrance to a building in the left foreground. The farm buildings have turf roofs with luxuriant growth, in one case sporting a small tree. Spindly birches stand next to them, their leaves shimmering in the light of the crescent moon. That moon is reflected in a small pond surrounded by marsh marigolds in full flower. You can hear the silence among the massive rock bluffs towering over the lake, and that in the centre looks like the head of an owl, watching over the stillness of the night.

Paintings of Norwegian Fjords 1827-99

By: hoakley
5 July 2025 at 19:30

With summer here at last, if you’re in the Northern Hemisphere, it’s time to head north away from the heat and spend a weekend exploring the fjords of Norway in the company of some of the nation’s great landscape artists. Today we’ll see the development of painting during the nineteenth century, then tomorrow we’ll conclude with the early twentieth century.

We start with the founding father of the golden age of painting in Norway, Johan Christian Claussen Dahl, who was born in Bergen, Norway.

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Johan Christian Dahl (1788–1857), Winter at Sognefjord (February 1827), oil on canvas, 61.5 x 75.5 cm, Nasjonalmuseet for kunst, arkitektur og design, Oslo, Norway. Wikimedia Commons.

In February 1827, Dahl painted one of the finest winter landscapes of a Norwegian fjord, Winter at Sognefjord. This is the largest and deepest of all the Norwegian fjords, shown deserted apart from a few crows gathered around the base of what appears to be a pinnacle of ice. This might be the famous Balder or Frithjof memorial stone at Leikanger.

Hans Gude was in the next generation, and in the earlier part of his career collaborated with fellow-countryman Adolph Tidemand.

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Adolph Tidemand (1814–1876) & Hans Gude (1825–1903), Brudeferden i Hardanger (Bridal journey in Hardanger) (1848), oil on canvas, 93 × 130 cm, Nasjonalgalleriet, Oslo. Wikimedia Commons.

Among the results of this collaboration are some of their most spectacular works, such as Bridal Journey in Hardanger (1848). Gude’s highly detailed and realistic landscape is set in the far south-west of Norway, in the region to the east of Bergen, where one of the world’s largest and most spectacular fjords carves its way from glacier to the sea.

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Hans Gude (1825–1903), Sandvik Fjord (1879), oil on canvas, 54.5 x 81.5 cm, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm. Wikimedia Commons.

Sandvik Fjord (1879) is Gude’s startlingly detailed depiction of a view from above Sandviken, now the northern suburbs of the Norwegian city of Bergen, looking to the west and the island of Askøy.

The most prolific of those who painted the fjords was Eilert Adelsteen Normann, who like many Norwegian artists of the century trained in Germany, in Düsseldorf. He was responsible for attracting many visitors to Norway, who bought his paintings, and in the early 1890s for helping Edvard Munch to success.

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Eilert Adelsteen Normann (1848–1918), From Romsdal Fjord, 1875 (1875), oil on canvas, dimensions not known, Bergen kunstmuseum (Kunstmuseene i Bergen), Bergen, Norway. Wikimedia Commons.

Normann’s From Romsdal Fjord, painted in 1875, is the earliest of his dated works that I have located. It shows the ninth longest fjord in Norway, carving its way through this huge mountain gorge. A small party of well-dressed people have arrived in small boats, for a picnic on a rock spit. A sailing boat is gliding slowly along the mirror surface of the water, and in the far distance is a steamer.

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Eilert Adelsteen Normann (1848–1918), Romsdal Fjord (1877), oil on canvas, 112 x 191 cm, Nationalmuseum, Stockholm. Image by Linn Ahlgren, via Wikimedia Commons.

A couple of summers later, Normann returned to the same fjord and painted Romsdal Fjord (1877), using a similar formula for its staffage. Next to his signature, at the lower left, the artist states that this work was painted not in Norway but when he was back in Düsseldorf.

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Eilert Adelsteen Normann (1848-1918), Munken gård in Esefjorden (date not known), oil on canvas, dimensions and location not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Munken gård in Esefjord was painted on the shore of this tributary to the mighty Sognefjord, in the south-west of Norway, near Normann’s summer cabin.

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Eilert Adelsteen Normann (1848-1918), The Steamship (date not known), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

One of the regular passenger and cargo ferry services steams up an unidentified fjord in Normann’s The Steamship.

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Eilert Adelsteen Normann (1848-1918), Sognefjord, Norway (date not known), further details not known. Wikimedia Commons.

Sognefjord, Norway returns to Norway’s longest and deepest fjord, as it carves its way due east from the southern bulge of the coastline. This view features Normann’s favourite small craft, and the sky and rock have become very painterly.

Sognefjord is fed by meltwater from Jostedalsbreen, the largest glacier in continental Europe, and the Hurrungane mountain range, rising to its highest peak Store Skagastølstind, with an elevation of 2,405 metres (7,890 feet). Like several Norwegian mountains, that was first climbed by the English mountaineer William Cecil Slingsby, on 21 July 1876. Slingsby made many first ascents in Norway during his thirty-year climbing campaign there from 1872, and is often regarded as the father of Norwegian mountaineering.

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