Joachim Frich
Joachim Frich | |
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Joachim Frich (c. 1830) | |
Born |
24 July 1810 Bergen, Norway |
Died |
29 January 1858 47) Kristiania, Norway | (aged
Occupation | Artist |
Years active | 1840-1850 |
Joachim Christian Geelmuyden Gyldenkrantz Frich (24 July 1810 - 29 January 1858) was a Norwegian landscape painter.[1]
Joachim Frich was from Bergen, Norway. He studied at the Art Academy in Copenhagen from 1834 to 1836. From 1836 to 1837, he was an art pupil of Johan Christian Dahl in Dresden, Germany. From 1837-1839, he stayed in Munich, where he was influences by the landscape paintings of Carl Rottmann.[2]
In 1850, he completed a series of six large decorative landscape paintings for the dining room in Oscarshall palace on Bygdøy.[3] He also completed illustrations for Norge fremstillet i tegninger, a series of books produced by Norwegian publisher and author, Christian Tønsberg.[4]
Gallery
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Høstlandskap (1848)
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Fra Hallingdal (1849)
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Bakkehuset Pilestredet (1850)
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Fra øvre Telemark (1852)
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Fra Holsfjorden, Ringerike (1856)
References
- ↑ Article in Store norske leksikon
- ↑ Johan Christian Dahl, Maler (Norsk biografisk leksikon. Forfatter av denne artikkelen, Marie Lødrup Bang)
- ↑ Oscarshall, den nordvestlige delen: 1856 (Fra Chr. Tønsbergs publikasjon Oscarshall, 1856)
- ↑ Tønsberg: Norge fremstillet i Tegninger (1853-55) (Jostedal historielag)
Other sources
- Noss, Aagot (1973) Joachim Frichs draktakvarellar (Det Norske Samlaget) ISBN 978-82-521-0193-5
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