Last updated on 27 January 2000
(Try also walk1.html, a somewhat revised walking tour through Vigeland's Sculpture Park)
Our permanent address can always be found at: http://go.to/vigeland

One of the artistic highlights of Norway is the Sculpture Park in Oslo. The park contains 192 sculptures with more than 600 figures, all modeled in full size by Gustav Vigeland without the assistance of pupils or other artists. Vigeland also designed the architectural setting and the layout of the grounds.

The initial point of the park sculptures was the Fountain. A model was presented in 1907 to the city counsel and Gustav Vigeland was commissioned to make a Fountain. But as the time passed and not enough money was raised yet, Vigeland added many more sculptures to the project - granite sculptures that eventually were placed around the later Monolith. In 1924, the City of Oslo decided that the whole project should be fulfilled in the Frogner Park, later called Vigeland Park. In 1931 followed a renewal of the bridge over the Frogner ponds with the addition of numerous sculptures on the parapets and grounds. For the rest of his life, Vigeland continued to model new sculptures for the park until his death in 1943.

Gustav Vigeland was born in 1869 in the south-coast town of Mandal in Norway. Vigeland's artistic talents were first revealed in his drawings and woodcarvings and at the age of fifteen, his father took him to Oslo to apprentice him to a master. The death of his father only two years later forced Vigeland to return to Mandal and relinquish all hopes of becoming a sculptor. In 1888, Vigeland was again back in the capital, this time taking with him a bundle of sketches for statues, groups and reliefs, their motifs mostly deriving from Greek mythology and the Bible. The sculptor, Brynjulf Bergslien, impressed by his drawings, took him into his studio and gave him his first practical training.

The work of Auguste Rodin, seen by Vigeland on visits to the artist's studio in Paris, made a perceptible impact. Rodin's intimate treatment of his relationship between man and woman was also influential in Vigeland's life-long development of this theme.

"I was a sculptor before I was born. I was driven and lashed onward by powerful forces outside myself. There was no other path, and no matter how hard I might have tried to find one, I would have been forced back again."


The Monolith

The column, 14.12 meters (46 feet) high carved out of a single block of stone, consists of 121 figures. Modeled by Vigeland in the years 1924-25, it took three stone carvers from 1929 to 1943 to complete the Monolith, just shortly before Vigeland died. The column is completely covered by human figures in relief, singly or in groups. At the bottom there are seemingly inert bodies. Above them figures ascent in a spiral, the movement halting midway and then rising at a fast pace towards the summit which is covered by small children. Various interpretations of the Monolith have been suggested: Man's resurrection, the struggle for existence, Man's yearning for for spiritual spheres, the transcendence of everyday life and cyclic repetition.

 


The Monolith Plateau

Surrounding the Monolith are 36 groups in granite depicting the cycle of life. Every sculpture includes at least two figures depicting Man in a variety of typical human situations and relationships. A man and woman sit facing one another with a little child between them. Children play, young men and women dream and embrace. Old age is represented in several groups. The groups show a certain variation in composition and form. Initially, Vigeland wanted to retain the volume of the granite block. The figures from this early period are broad and simple with a minimal of detail. Later, however, he introduced greater differentiation of composition and figure style and more space was allowed between figures. Although a skilled carver himself, Vigeland did not sculpt directly in granite. He modeled the groups in full size and employed professional artisans to do the time-consuming work of transferring the original models into stone.





The Fountain

The Fountain is the earliest sculpture unit in the park. In the center of the basin, six giants hold the large saucer-shaped vessel aloft and from it a curtain of water spills down around them. The men, representing different ages, may be interpreted as toiling with the burden of life and the effort expended in lifting the heavy vessel varies. Water, a universal symbol of fertility, is used within the fountain complex in a meaningful juxtaposition with the twenty "tree groups" on the surrounding parapet, the latter evidently symbolizing the "tree of life."

The combination of human beings and trees in two meter high sculptures is one of Vigeland's most original concepts. The tree groups represent a romantic expression of Man's relationship to nature. The also form the setting for life's evolving stages, stretching from childhood and adolescence through adulthood to old age and death.



The Bridge

58 bronze sculptures on granite parapets (1926-1933) stand on either side of the Bridge portraying people of widely differing ages, although there is less emphasis on old age than others in the park. Many characteristic representations of children are noticeable. Dominant motifs among the groups are the relationships between man and woman and between adults and children. In one sculpture you find a bronze wheel enclosing a man and woman linked together in a rotating movement. The circle being a well-known symbol of eternity, the sculpture may indicate the constant attraction and love between the sexes or a figurative version of the Eastern symbol of "Yin and Yang."






The Wheel Of Life

After finishing the 58 sculptures for the bridge in the early 1930s, Vigeland completed a small children's circle which is placed at one end of the bridge next to the small lake. In 1934, he completed the large bronze "Wheel of Life," which is composed of figures swirling in an eternal circle.


Iron Gates

Wrought iron gates surround the Monolith Plateau and Vigeland park.


Vigeland Museum

Those who visit the park may see the original full-size plaster casts to the sculptures in bronze and granite in the Vigeland Museum, which is situated five minutes south of the park. In the museum you will also find Vigeland's early works, those which are mostly influenced by August Rodin, and his woodcuts.

Man and Woman Mother and ChildIbsen

See also "The Little Hot-Head", from the earliest sketch (1901) to the finished work (1928-1930).


Hope you enjoyed the tour and that it inspires you to visit Oslo and the Vigeland Sculpture Park. We would like your comments and would appreciate knowing how you found our website.
Mail to:          Thanks for coming. Number of visitors since January 29, 2000:


Please visit the official Vigeland Museum site in Oslo by clicking on the icon below.

 

Thanks go to Anne Høegh Brand of the Vigeland Museum for providing additional information on Gustav Vigeland.

Books, Catalogues, Posters, Videos, Woodcut Reproductions, Slides and Postcards can be purchased directly from the Vigeland Museum Store (FAX +47 22 54 25 40). This site has no affiliation with the Vigeland Museum.


REFERENCES:

1. "Embrace of Life: The Sculpture of Gustav Vigeland." Text by Nathan Cabot Hale. Photos by David Finn. H.N. Abrams, New York, 1969.

2. "Gustav Vigeland Sculpture Park and Museum in Oslo." Normanns Kunstforlag A/S, Oslo, Norway. 1993


OTHER VIGELAND-RELATED SITES ON THE WEB:

Eros

Eros in the art of Gustav Vigeland: Gustav Vigeland's erotic visions

Vigelands Skulpturepark - Oslo: A nice Vigeland site

The Sculpture of Gustav Vigeland: Wonderful photos by Jeffrey Howe

The Album: Vigeland Park - A nice site

Gustav Vigeland- Recent photos of the sculpture park

Vigeland Park Sculpture: Nice photo of Vigeland Park sculpture

 

Shin's Photo Gallery: Norway - Photos of Vigeland Park and Norway

Vigeland Gardens: A snapshot of the central fountain

Verkommen til Vigelansparken

Verkommen til Vigelandsparken: Historical information - in Norwegian

 

Another Vigeland Site

 

Touching Heads

Vigeland Park, Oslo: Also contains nice photos of the Monolith

Survival in Norway: Hiking tour of Norway

 

Virtual Sightseeing: A Walking Tour of Oslo

The Family

 

Oslo Multimedia exhibit

 

Another Vigeland Park site

 

Photos of Oslo


MY OTHER WEB SITES INCLUDE:
[Irish Impressionists]