Thorvald Niss

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Thorvald Niss, photographed by Heinrich Tönnies (1874)

Thorvald Simeon Niss (1842–1905) was a Danish landscape painter who became interested in marine art after becoming a member of the Skagen Painters.

Biography

Born in Assens, he was the son of Niels Frederik Niss, a house painter, and his wife Barbara Kirstine. When he was 18, he became a painter's apprentice in Copenhagen where he tried to develop his artistic talents in the evenings. From 1861, he attended evening school at the Royal Danish Academy and from 1863 worked as a decorator at the Royal Copenhagen porcelain factory. In the late 1870s, he came into contact with Otto Bache who invited him to work in his studio where he became acquainted with the latest trends in French painting. By the beginning of the 1880s, he had become a modern landscape artist, comparable to Christian Zacho and Godfred Christensen.[1]

The broad strokes and strong colours he applied to his autumn and winter landscapes brought him wide recognition. In 1882, his Septemberdag i Jægersborg dyrehave won him a gold medal in Vienna and the following year a winter landscape of the Folehaven woods was bought by Statens Museum for Kunst, the Danish national gallery bringing him wider recognition. Thanks to a travel grant, in 1885 he went to Italy and Greece, and in 1889 to Paris. In 1887, he visited Skagen where he became a member of artists' colony known as the Skagen Painters. There he painted the sea, adopting a new approach to marine art with his Morgengry (Daybreak) in 1888 and Strandparti. Grenen in 1889. He went on to paint marine scenes elsewhere, especially of the Mediterranean.[2] In the 1890s, he increasingly used etching for his marine scenes, some with symbolic undertones.[1]

After suffering for a number of years from a nervous breakdown, he died in Frederiksberg in 1905.[1]

Gallery

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Thorvald Niss", Dansk Biograpfisk Leksikon. (Danish) Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  2. "Thorvald Niss", Den Store Dansle. (Danish) Retrieved 15 October 2013.

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