atolier

Atolier is an ode to contemplation. An ode to artists that have devoted a lifetime to their craft. We believe in the passion and the dedication of these painters and drawers.

Thomas Fearnley

Thomas Fearnley was a Norvegian romantic painter.

Born in 1802 in Halden, he studied at the The Royal School of Drawing of Christiania (modern Oslo), then respectively at the Art Academy in Copenhagen and the Art Academy in Stockholm, which he completed in 1827.

Early paintings of Fearnley were sometimes commissioned by the Swedish royal family, for which he made multiple study trips in Norway, along with completing his studies. He then went to Germany where he studied under Johan Christian Dahl, in Dresden.

In the 1830s, Fearnley traveled Europe extensively: Munich, Paris, London, Venice, Rome and the province of Naples, among others. He sketched widely during these trips and was for this reason called “the European” of the Norwegian art world.

His paintings were typically oil landscapes that depict wilderness and nature with a monumental attitude. In 1838, on his way home from Italy, he discovered one of his yet most famous motifs today: the Upper Grindelwald Glacier in the Bernese Alps in Switzerland. At the time, the glacier was very close to the village and was therefore very accessible to the tourists.

Artwork Image

The Labro Falls at Kongsberg

1837

Artwork Image

Rock at Berchtesgaden

19th

Artwork Image

Terrace with Oak, Sorrento

1834

Artwork Image

The Grindelwaldgletscher

1838

Artwork Image

Landscape with traveler

1839

Artwork Image

Taormina, Sicily

1833

Artwork Image

Pergola with Oranges

1834

Artwork Image

Stormy Landscape with a Rider

1835

Artwork Image

Slindebjørka

1839

Artwork Image

Arco naturale, Capri

1833