ID |
Image |
Painting(From A to Z) |
Details |
2099 |
|
A Running Boy |
1802
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen |
2101 |
|
A Storm Brewing Behind a Farmhouse in Zealand |
1795
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen |
77646 |
|
Christian VII |
Date 1789(1789)
Medium Oil
cyf |
67503 |
|
det klassicistiska i dealet pa vag |
1787
se |
71132 |
|
en svensk flotta av en dansk-norsk under befal |
denna bild av slaget ar malad blott nagot artionde efterat av christian morholt.
se |
91108 |
|
Johan Bulow til Sanderumgard |
1700s
Medium Oil
cjr |
83098 |
|
Johan Theodor Holmskjold and family |
1785(1785)
Medium Oil
cyf |
79337 |
|
Louise Auguste of Denmark |
18th century
Medium Oil
cyf |
2102 |
|
Madame de Pragins |
1779
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen |
82221 |
|
Magdalen Charlotte Hedevig Numsen |
Date 1772(1772)
Medium Oil
cjr |
2100 |
|
Portrait of a Noblewoman with her Son |
1799-1800 |
29376 |
|
Portrait of a Woman |
mk65
25x21 1/2"
Oil on canvas
|
82275 |
|
Portrait of Agnete Marie Hielmstierne |
Date 1770s
Medium Oil
cyf |
79181 |
|
Portrait of Agnete Marie Hielmstierne (1753-1838), wife of Marcus Gerhard Rosen Crone |
1770s
cjr |
80878 |
|
Portrait of Bolette Marie Harboe |
1786(1786)
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 70 x 55 cm (27.6 x 21.7 in)
cyf |
77582 |
|
Portrait of Bolette Marie Harboe wife of Johan Frederik Lindencrone |
1786(1786)
Oil on canvas
70 ?? 55 cm (27.6 ?? 21.7 in)
cjr |
75840 |
|
Portrait of Christian VII of Denmark |
1789(1789)
cjr |
78069 |
|
Portrait of Christian VII of Denmark |
ca. 1775
cjr |
78410 |
|
Portrait of Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock (1724-1803), German poet |
ca. 1779
cjr |
2103 |
|
Portrait of Jean-Armand Tronchin |
1779
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen |
76904 |
|
Portrait of Prinsesse Louise Auguste of Denmark |
18th century
Oil
cjr |
90294 |
|
Portrat der Herzogin Louisa von Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg in turkischer Tracht |
c. 1780-1790
Medium oil on canvas
Dimensions 44.5 x 33.5 cm (17.5 x 13.2 in)
cjr |
80860 |
|
Self portrait |
1766(1766)
Medium Oil
cyf |
78566 |
|
Self-portrait |
1766 |
83074 |
|
Thomasine Gyllembourg |
Late 1700s
Medium Oil
cyf |
22831 |
|
View over the Lesser Belt (mk22) |
c 1800
Oil on canvas,42.3 x 62.5 cm
Copenhagen,Thorvaldsens Museum |
|
Jens Juel 1745-1802
Danish
Jens Juel Galleries
was a Danish painter, primarily known for his many portraits, of which the largest collection is on display at Frederiksborg Castle.
He was born in the house of his mothers brother Johan Jørgensen, who was a school teacher in Balslev on the island of Fyn. Jens Juel was the illegitimate son of Vilhelmine Elisabeth Juel (January 1725 ?C March 1799), who served at Wedellsborg and a fine gentleman, probably a Wedell or Lord Jens Juel. When Juel was one year old, his mother married Jørgen Jørgensen (1724 ?C June 4, 1796), who was a school master in Gamborg, not far from Balslev, and he grew up in Gamborg.
He showed an interest in painting from an early age, and his parents sent him to be an apprentice of painter Johann Michael Gehrman in Hamburg, where he worked hard for five or six years and improved himself so far, that he created himself a reputation as a painter of portraits, landscapes, etc. Just over twenty years old he came to Copenhagen to attend the Royal Danish Academy of Art. In 1767 he was awarded its small gold medal and in 1771 the large gold medal.
In 1772 he left Copenhagen to be away for eight years. Initially, he went to Rome where he stayed for four years together with other Danish artists, including Abildgaard. From Rome, he moved to Paris, at the time a center of portrait painting. In 1777 he moved on to Geneva, where he stayed for two years at the home of his friend Charles Bonnet in the company of other Danish artists, including etcher Clemens. In Geneva, Juel soon earned himself a reputation as an excellent artist and he painted many portraits. Through Bonnet, who had become a member of honour of the Danish academy, his reputation reached Denmark. After eight years of absence, he returned to Copenhagen in 1780 after a brief stay in Hamburg, where he met Klopstock. It was at his house, that he painted his well-known picture of "Messiadens Digter". Back in Copenhagen, he created himself a reputation as a painter of portraits for the royal house, nobility and the well-to-do.
April 4, 1782, he was unanimously elected to be a member of the academy by Mandelberg, Weidenhaupt and Abildgaard. He became the director of the academy in 1795.
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