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Lars Jorde

Landscape

Landscape

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About the original:

Date: 1896

Designation: Painting

Material and technique: Oil on canvas

Technique: Oil

Material: Canvas

Dimensions: 63 x 95.5 cm

Subject: Visual arts

Classification: 532 - Visual arts

Motif: Landscape

Acquisition: Purchased 1992

Inventory no.: NG.M.04254

Part of exhibition: Art 3. Works from the collection 1814-1950, 2007 - 2011

Landschaft als Kosmos der Soule. Malerei des nordischen Symbolismus bis Munch, 1998

Tradition and innovation. Norway around the turn of the century, 1994 - 1995

Registration level: Single object

Owner and collection: The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Visual Art Collections

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Lars Jorde

Lars Jorde was a Norwegian painter. Jorde painted landscapes, interiors, cityscapes and portraits. He was a pupil of Gerhard Munthe in 1889, of Alfred Philippe Roll in Paris in 1893, in 1894–96 of Eilif Peterssen's and Harriet Backer's painting school, and then until 1902 studied mainly with Kristian Zahrtmann in Copenhagen and in Italy. Later he lived in Lillehammer.

Under the impression of the romantic moods of the 1890s, he initially painted landscapes and interiors in soft, bluish twilight tones such as Christmas Party (1895–1896, National Museum/National Gallery). The encounter with Italy gave his art a stricter attitude, with more emphasis on line than on colour, for example Jysk landscape (1899). Decisive was his impression of French Impressionism in Paris in 1900. From then on, he preferred to paint bright and friendly landscapes, cityscapes and portraits, often with winter motifs. Among other things, he decorated Vingrom's chapel and the altarpiece Jesus' baptism in Sjøli chapel (1925), illustrated Fridtjof Nansen's Fram over the polar sea (1897) and Tryggve Andersen's I cancelliraadens dage (1907). The National Museum/National Gallery owns several pictures of him.