Adelsteen Normann

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Adelsteen Normann
Adelnor0.jpg
Born Eilert Adelsteen Normann
(1848-05-01)1 May 1848
Bodin
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Kristiania (Oslo)
Resting place Stahnsdorfer Waldfriedhof, Berlin
Nationality Norwegian
Occupation Painter
Known for Landscape painting
Spouse(s) Catharina Weitgan
(1870–1911, her death)
Luise Rostalski
(1911–1918, his death)

Adelsteen Normann (1 May 1848 - 26 December 1918)[1] was a Norwegian painter who worked in Berlin. He was a noted painter of landscapes of Norway.[2] Normann was the artist who invited Edvard Munch to Berlin, where he painted The Scream.[3] Normann's fjord paintings are credited with making the Norwegian fjords a more popular tourist destination.[4]

Biography

Eilert Adelsteen Normann was born in 1848 in Bodin in Norway. He studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf from 1869 to 1872 and his paintings belong to the Düsseldorf school of painting.[5] He studied with the Estonian painter Eugen Dücker.[6]

Normann based himself in Berlin from 1883.[5] His paintings were nearly always landscapes and invariably of the fjords of Norway where he would show the water combined with small houses and boats and steep mountainsides.[6]

Normann lived at the same time as Edvard Munch who was a fellow countryman. In the early 1890s, Normann was based in Berlin where he was doing good business selling his paintings to hotel owners. Normann had seen Munch's work when he had been exhibiting at Kristiania. Normann wrote to Munch asking if he would exhibit his work in Berlin. Munch was so overcome that he packed up his exhibition on 20 October 1892 and went to Berlin where Normann true to his word befriended him. Munch's work was placed in an exhibition which caused such a stir that the painters in Berlin split into two societies. (It was suspected that the underlying reason for Normann's invitation to Munch was to cause this split).[3]

Normann exhibited in Oslo,[3] Berlin, London, Vienna, Düsseldorf, Munich and Paris.[5] Although based in Germany from 1883, he would return to Norway each summer.[7] Normann and Hans Dahl both had large ornamented wooden villas near Balestrand where they would entertain.[2] His "dragon style" house was bought in 1891 and built (like many Norwegian houses) from a pre-fabricated kit from the city of Trondheim. The house stayed with his heirs until 1934.[8]

Normann notably exhibited at the prestigious Salon de Paris from as early as 1882. His paintings earned a 'Mention Honorable' in 1884 and he was awarded a bronze medal in 1889.[6] It is assumed that his fjord paintings contributed to make the Norwegian fjords a popular tourist destination.[4]

He died at Kristiania (now: Oslo) on 26 December 1918.

Legacy

Normann's paintings are included in galleries in Bergen, Cincinnati, Cologne, Dresden, Leeds, Liverpool and Stockholm.[5] In Normann's birthplace in 2010 is a dedicated gallery which has thirty of his paintings.[7]

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 Nordic landscapes: region and belonging on the northern edge of Europe, Michael Jones, Kenneth Olwig, p.392, accessed April 2010
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Edvard Munch: Behind the Scream, Sue Prideaux, p.135-7, 2007, ISBN 978-0-300-12401-9, accessed April 2010
  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Nineteenth-century painters and painting: a dictionary, Volume 1977, Part 2, Geraldine Norman, p.160, accessed April 2010
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Adlsteen Normann, Burlington.co.uk, accessed April 2010
  7. Villa Normann, nrk.no, accessed April 2010

External links

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