Agnes Nyblin

Agnes Nyblin née Janson (25 January 1869 – 20 August 1945) was a Norwegian photographer. She started a photography business in Bergen with her husband but he died in 1894. She ran the business until 1911.

Agnes Nyblin
Born25 January 1869
Died20 August 1945
NationalityNorway
OccupationPhotographer
Spouse(s)Karl Anton Peter Dyrendahl Nyblin

Life

Agnes Janson was born in 1869 to Jacob Neumann and Marthe Helene (born Schuman) Janson. She married the photographer Karl Anton Peter Dyrendahl Nyblin and they created a studio in Bergen called "K. Nyblin". Her husband died in 1894, but she continued the business successfully.[2]

She became part of a growing number of female Norwegian photographers. The growth was made possible by a change in the law in 1866 which allowed women to have a business. The Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography is disparaging about the new group of female photographers but it identifies seven women whose work is of note including Marie Høeg in Horten, Louise Abel in Christiania, Louise Wold in Holmestrand, Augusta Solberg in Lillehammer and Nyblin and Hulda Marie Bentzen in Bergen. Nybin was chosen to be a police photographer in 1897.[3]

The photograph shown was taken at a music festival in 1898 and it records a meeting of many of Denmark's leading composers and musicians.[1]

Nybin retired in 1911. The business continued in the care of her younger brother, Helmich Janson, until four years after her death which was in 1945.[2]

gollark: Nuclear is much better, but people go "OH NO NUCLEAR SCARY" and yet seemingly do not care about the alternative effectively being fossil fuels?
gollark: Or batteries, which have their own problems.
gollark: The panels are really energy-intensive to produce anyway, degrade after 20 years, and you need uncool fossil-fuel plants to cover for the solar panels when they don't produce, which is often.
gollark: Except for remote places which can't get grid connectivity.
gollark: Solar is somewhat uncool in my opinion.

References

  1. Norske komponister ved Musikkfesten i Bergen, 1898, Document.dk, Retrieved 22 May 2016
  2. Agnes Nyblin, Retrieved 21 May 2016
  3. John Hannavy (2008). Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography: A-I, index. Taylor & Francis. p. 1010. ISBN 978-0-415-97235-2.
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