Stambok | Erindringsbok fra Chr. H. Grosch

  • Artists:

    • Christian Heinrich Grosch (Manufactured by - assumed)
    • Christian Hornemann (assumed certain)
    • Troels Lund (assumed)
    • Albert Küchler (assumed)
    • Louis Aumont (assumed)
    • C. C. C. Hansen
    • Thomas Fearnley
    • Gustav Adolph Lammers (assumed)
    • Carl Georg Ferdinand Thielemann (assumed)
    • Ole Jørgen Schmidt (assumed)
  • Creation date: Mellom 1820 og 1850
  • Object type: Sketchbook

Not on display

"Stambok | Erindringsbok fra Chr. H. Grosch" consists of:

Artists/producers

  • Christian Heinrich Grosch

    Architect

    Born 21.01.1801 in København, Danmark, death 04.03.1865 in Oslo

  • Christian Hornemann

    Visual artist

    Born 1765, death 1844

  • Troels Lund

    Theater painter

    Born 1802, death 1867

  • Albert Küchler

    Visual artist

    Born 1803, death 1886

  • Louis Aumont

    Visual artist

    Born 07.01.1805, death 06.05.1879

  • C. C. C. Hansen

    Painter, Visual artist

    Born 03.11.1804 in Roma, Italia, death 29.03.1880 in Fredriksberg

  • Thomas Fearnley

    Visual artist, Painter

    Born 1802 in Halden, Halden, death 1842 in München, Tyskland

    Thomas Fearnley died at the early age of 39, but left behind a rich legacy in art history. His large paintings such as The Labro Falls and The Grindelwald Glacier bring us closer to nature as he experienced it.  

    Thomas Fearnley was born in Fredrikshald, today called Halden. When he was only five years old he was sent to Christiania (today Oslo) to live with his aunt and uncle. He later began studying at the Norwegian Military Academy, one of very few places in the country that offered instruction in drawing. However, he had trouble concentrating at school, and cut short his military education. When he was 17 he began to take an evening course at the newly established Drawing School (Tegneskolen)  while working at his uncle’s shop during the day.

    Two of Fearnley’s pictures were shown at the Drawing School’s first exhibition, held in 1820. His paintings hung alongside works by many of the most prominent names in Norwegian art history. J. C. Dahl was already well on his way to fame, and Johannes Flintoe and W. M. Carpelan showed motifs from their travels in Norway. This was the first time that the residents of the country’s capital were able to see their country depicted through the eyes of artists. Norway’s magnificent natural beauty was now “discovered”, and young Thomas Fearnley found himself in the midst of this sensational event.

    Close to nature

    Opportunities in Norway at that time were too limited for an ambitious aspiring artist, so Fearnley pursued his art studies abroad. After studying for several years at the Art Academy in Copenhagen, he moved to Stockholm, where he received several prestigious commissions from the Swedish royal family. But his interest in Norwegian nature never left him. In the summer of 1824 he went on his first study tour in Norway, to Telemark.

    Two years later a study tour took him to western Norway. At Ytre Kroken in Luster he met J. C. Dahl, who by then had become a professor in Dresden. Fearnley drew great inspiration from his encounter with Dahl and the trips they took together in the area. His drawings and oil studies grew freer and acquired a more realistic style. Dahl, too, regarded Fearnley’s nature studies as eliciting his true inner self: “For here he presented his own self, as he was and as he felt the presence of nature, when it was upon him.” (Dahl, in “Thomas Fearnley 1802–1842” by Andreas Aubert in Nordisk tidskrift för vetenskap, konst och industri [Nordic Journal of Science, Art and Industry], Stockholm, 1903).  

    The European and the glacier

    Fearnley was a sociable man, and had a wide circle of colleagues, friends and supporters in the international art community. In the course of his short life he travelled constantly, and was for this reason called “the European” of the Norwegian art world.

    Together with a few of his fellow artists, Fearnley walked from Munich over the Alps to Italy in 1832. It was a cold and wet trip. One of the friends accompanying him, Danish painter Wilhelm Bendz, contracted pneumonia and died shortly after they arrived in Italy.

    Fearnley spent over two years in Italy. His drawings and oil studies show us how he became a master at rendering light and shadow. On his way home he discovered what would become one of his main motifs: the Upper Grindelwald Glacier in the Bernese Alps in Switzerland. At that time the glacier descended all the way down to the village, and was easily accessible to tourists. As a result of climate change, the glacier has retreated at a rapid pace. Today we can only see a remnant of the mighty ice masses that Fearnley would have witnessed.

    A friend in need

    Thomas Fearnley is referred to as having a good disposition and a big heart. “He was an ally to share a bottle of wine with; he was a friend in need”, wrote his close friend Henrik Wergeland. He was a hard worker, and had a promising career ahead of him when he died of typhoid fever in January 1842. He left behind a young widow and a nine-month-old son.

    Thanks to his family, Fearnley’s drawings and studies were preserved for future generations. The National Museum’s collection comprises 65 paintings, over 800 drawings and 27 etchings.

  • Gustav Adolph Lammers

    Priest, Artist, Author

    Born 26.05.1802, death 02.05.1878

  • Carl Georg Ferdinand Thielemann

    Architect

    Born 08.03.1803, death 28.05.1863

  • Ole Jørgen Schmidt

    Architect

    Born 10.07.1793 in København, Danmark, death 27.02.1848 in Hamburg

Work info

Creation date:
Mellom 1820 og 1850
Other titles:
Stambok | Erindringsbok fra Chr. H. Grosch (NOR)
Object type:
Materials and techniques:
Ulike tegneteknikker i blyant, penn, akvarell, gouache og lavering på velinpapir, omslag av skinn
Dimensions:
  • Height: 141 mm
  • Width: 222 mm
  • Depth: 30 mm
Keywords:
Production place:
Inventory no.:
OK-18435
Cataloguing level:
Group
Acquisition:
Unidentified accession (probably before 1929)
Owner and collection:
Stiftelsen Kunstindustrimuseet, The Design Collections
Photo:
Andreas Harvik