February 2 degrees cold
February 2 degrees cold
High-quality reproductions from the National Museum's collection. Posters by DAIDDA are printed on Litho White Matt - 230 gram photo paper in premium quality. Artprints by DAIDDA are printed on Moab Entrada Natural 190 gram cotton art paper in premium quality. Produced by DAIDDA.
About the original:
Date: 1887
Other titles: February, 2 Degrees below Zero (ENG)
Designation: Painting
Material and technique: Oil on canvas
Technique: Oil
Material: Canvas
Dimensions: 71.8 x 87.4 cm
Subject: Visual arts
Classification: 532 - Visual arts
Type of motif: Landscape
Acquisition: Purchased 1887
Inventory no.: NG.M.00329
Part of exhibition: Art 3. Works from the collection 1814-1950, 2007 - 2011
Art and non-art in the National Gallery. The clean-up April 1942, 1942
Winterland, 1993
Winterland, 1993 - 1994
Registration level: Single object
Owner and collection: The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Visual Art Collections
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February 2 degrees cold
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River in winter landscape
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Winter landscape
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Jorgen Sorensen
Jørgen Sørensen (1854-1895) was a Norwegian painter. He suffered a hip injury at the age of seven, which led to difficulty walking and no regular school attendance. But his older brother helped him get an artistic education, and he joined the circle of friends around Edvard Munch.
Sørensen was particularly interested in landscape painting and preferred to paint simple autumn and gray weather atmospheres with a fine and gentle tone and a reverence for nature. His breakthrough came with the Modums pictures, and he also painted light-filled summer landscapes after his first trip to Paris. Sørensen avoided grandiose subjects and preferred to paint winter landscapes, where he mastered the painterly problems of taking care of all the color values that the Impressionists discovered in the snow. He was an industrious artist and left behind a large output, some of his best works being filled with a wealth of painterly detail. As a human being, he received a rare beautiful legacy.