Liensfiord Lake, Norway
Oil Painting
1841 (painted)
1841 (painted)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Danby visited Norway in 1825 and wrote to a friend: 'God knows the country is wild enough'. The full title of this picture was: 'Liensfiord Lake, in Norway; a sudden storm, called a flanger, passing off - an effect which in their lonely lakes occurs nearly every day in autumn'.
Object details
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Object type | |
Titles |
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Materials and techniques | oil on canvas |
Brief description | Oil painting entitled 'Liensfiord Lake, Norway' by Francis Danby. British School, 1841. |
Physical description | The sombre colouring and leaden atmosphere is the background for details such as the deformed and vestigial tree clinging to the cliff face and the skeleton of a seal on the shore which a storm has presumably tossed from the rocks. |
Dimensions |
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Style | |
Marks and inscriptions | 'F. DANBY' (Signed diagonally, lower left) |
Credit line | Given by John Sheepshanks, 1857 |
Object history | The full title of the picture, as given in the Royal Academy exhibition catalogue was `Liensfiord Lake, in Norway; a sudden storm, called a flanger, passing off - an effect which in their lonely lakes occurs nearly every day in autumn.' This implied violence of nature, and the mood of desolation, are typical components of Romantic thought, as is the promise of imminent release in the form of the brighter sky approaching behind the storm clouds. Given by John Sheepshanks, 1857. |
Historical context | Danby was in Norway in 1825 and perhaps also in 1840. To the British, that country would have seemed one of the most remote in Europe, and Danby emphasises the grimmest aspects of the unfamiliar landscape before him. He had written home to a friend: 'there are very beautiful scenes and extremely picturesque...God knows the country is wild enough'. |
Subjects depicted | |
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Summary | Danby visited Norway in 1825 and wrote to a friend: 'God knows the country is wild enough'. The full title of this picture was: 'Liensfiord Lake, in Norway; a sudden storm, called a flanger, passing off - an effect which in their lonely lakes occurs nearly every day in autumn'. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | FA.67[O] |
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Record created | December 15, 1999 |
Record URL |
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