*** Welcome to piglix ***

Fra Stalheim

View from Stalheim
Norwegian: Fra Stalheim
Johan Christian Claussen Dahl – View from Stalheim – Google Art Project.jpg
Artist Johan Christian Dahl
Year 1842 (1842)
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 190 cm × 246 cm (75 in × 97 in)
Location National Gallery of Norway, Oslo
Accession NG.M.01060
Website digitaltmuseum.no/things/fra-stalheim-maleri/NMK-B/NG.M.01060

View from Stalheim (Norwegian: Fra Stalheim) is an 1842 oil painting by J. C. Dahl of the mountainous view from Stalheim, Voss, Hordaland. It is a major work of Romantic nationalism and has become a national icon. It is regarded as one of Dahl's best works.

The painting shows the view from the peak at Stalheim over the Nærøy Valley towards the sugar-loaf shaped peak of Jordalsnuten in late afternoon sunshine, framed by peaks and a rainbow. The sun shines on a small village near the centre. Dahl has clearly delineated figures and buildings even in the distance, creating "a world in miniature". One of his purposes was realism; the other was to capture the glory and magnificence of the mountains, and associated with that, of his country's culture. In this evocation of grandeur the painting prefigures later US landscapes, in particular Church's Rainy Season in the Tropics (1866), which has a similar crowning rainbow. The rainbow itself, a symbol of reconciliation, peace, and in Christianity of God's grace, was also frequently used by Joseph Anton Koch and by Dahl's friend and associate Caspar David Friedrich.

Dahl began work on the painting in 1836 and completed it in 1842. It is based on two pencil and watercolour sketches he had made from the Gudvangen road in July 1826 during his first visit to the high mountain regions of Norway. The final version is close to the studies in both composition and details, including the sunlight highlighting the village; but Dahl has intensified the imagery by narrowing the valley, giving more prominence to the Jordalsnuten peak and less to the reappearance of the river from the shadows.

Dahl had trouble with the painting and avoided similarly large works after its completion.

The painting was made for Countess Wedel of Bogstad. Carl Gustav Wedel-Jarlsberg gave it to the National Gallery of Norway in 1914.


...
Wikipedia

...