Carl Baagøe

Carl Emil Baagøe (22 August 1829, Copenhagen – 16 April 1902, Snekkersten) was a Danish marine painter.

Carl Baagøe (date unknown)

Biography

His father was a sailing master. He displayed artistic talent at an early age and was given drawing lessons. He also had access to classes at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts.[1] In 1848, after becoming a journeyman decorative painter, he impoverished himself by frequenting the dockyards, working on his desire to become a marine artist, rather than attending to his work.

By 1855, he decided that he had mastered his craft and began exhibiting his seascapes. In 1864, he received a small grant to study abroad from the Royal Academy. Throughout his life, he would make numerous voyages to collect material for his works; notably to Iceland (1855) and Norway (1866, 1868).[1] He tended to prefer quiet scenes with still water or fishermen's villages. His works were very popular in England. He also provided illustrations for the Illustreret Tidende.[1]

gollark: Dunbar's number is 150, and also a very approximate approximation someone made up.
gollark: Greetings.
gollark: https://old.reddit.com/r/slatestarcodex/comments/9h2jbi/you_should_probably_lift_weights/
gollark: CONSUME protein, apparently.
gollark: ∀n ∈ ℝ, garloid n, as they say.

References

Vedbæk Seen from the Pier
  1. Biographical notes @ Kunstindeks Danmark.

Media related to Carl Emil Baagøe at Wikimedia Commons


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