Victoria Åberg
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- Dukaattipalkinto (1861)
- First Class Artist (1866)
Victoria Åberg | |
|---|---|
Åberg (c. 1860s) | |
| Born | Ulrika Victoria Åberg[1] 24 February 1824[1] |
| Died | 15 July 1892 (aged 68)[1] |
| Movement | Düsseldorf school of painting |
| Awards |
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Victoria Åberg (24 February 1824 – 15 July 1892) was a Finnish landscape painter in the Düsseldorf tradition, notable as one of the first Finnish women to achieve a sustained professional career as an artist.[2][3]
Åberg began training at the Finnish Art Society Drawing School (Suomen Taideyhdistyksen Piirustuskoulu) as part of its first cohort in its opening year, 1848.[4] Afterwards she continued her studies first in Düsseldorf under Hans Gude, and later, funded by a state stipend, in Dresden and Weimar throughout the late 1850s and early 1860s.[4][1]
Career
Åberg's public debut came in 1849.[4]
Alongside her artistic pursuits, Åberg worked as a secondary school arts teacher from the mid-1840s until early 1860s.[4][1]
After that, she lived and worked outside of Finland — mostly in Germany, but also spending some years in Italy — more or less continuously from the mid-1860s onwards, at least in part because she felt that her Düsseldorfer work was not sufficiently appreciated in her home country.[2][4]