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Aasta Hansteen

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Aasta Hansteen

Moses asks for victory supported by Aaron and Hur

Aasta Hansteen

Self-portrait

Aasta Hansteen

Seated Woman with rose in her hair.

Aasta Hansteen, also known as Hasta Hanseen (born December 10, 1824 – April 13, 1908), was a Norwegian painter, writer, and early feminist.[1][2]


Life and career

Aasta Hansteen was born in Christiania, modern day Oslo, the daughter of Christopher Hansteen, a noted professor of astronomy, geophysics and applied mathematics at the University of Oslo. She started her art education in Copenhagen (1840 - 1841) where she learned to draw. She continued her training for three years at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf where she studied fine brush alignment. She is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting. She exhibited her work at the 1855 World's Fair in Paris.[3]

She returned to Norway and settled in Christiania where she, for several years, was in demand as the city's only portrait artist. Her most famous painting is possibly the portrait of her father, which is on permanent exhibit at the National Gallery of Norway.[4]


Woman with rose in her hair
painted by Aasta Hansteen (1853)

Overwhelmed by the interest in her portraits, she resigned from her craft for several years and moved to Telemark, where she developed an interest in Norwegian dialects. When she moved back to Christiania, she studied with the linguist Ivar Aasen. In 1862 she published anonymously a small book written in Nynorsk and had the distinction of being the first woman to publish in this language.[5]

Together with her foster daughter Theodora Nielsen, she sailed from Christiania on April 9, 1880. She lived in the United States for nine years (1880-1889). She spent six and a half years in the Boston area and two and a half years in the Midwest, primarily Chicago. Aasta Hansteen met or observed such leading reformers on the time as Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, Mary Livermore, and Wendell Phillips. Her initial income came from writing for the Christiania-based newspaper Verdens Gang, which she supplemented by painting portraits on commission. Among others, Norwegian reformer and editor Marcus Thrane sat for his portrait. In 1889, she returned to Norway with a renewed interest in the women's movement. She joined the The Norwegian Association for Women's Rights (Norsk Kvinnesaksforening) and became an active contributor in the press on women's rights.[6][7]

Hansteen died in Kristiania, modern-day Oslo.

Hansteen was a vocal critic of the Judeo-Christian and Pauline perception of women, which she felt was denigrating of women's spiritual worth. She was a strong and controversial personality, who frequented cafes and markets on her own, and became one of the more colorful fixtures in Oslo.[8]


Legacy

Henrik Ibsen is said to have used her as a model for the character Lona Hessel in his play The Pillars of Society. Additionally she was believed to served as the inspiration for the title role in Gunnar Heiberg's Aunt Ulrikke. Norwegian pianist and composer Agathe Backer Grøndahl dedicated compositions to her. Her grave in Vår Frelsers gravlund in Oslo, marked with a bust made by Gustav Vigeland. Aasta Hansteens vei in the Stovner borough of the city of Oslo and Aasta Hansteens vei in Trondheim are both named for Aasta Hansteen. A statue of her by Norwegian sculptor, Nina Sundbye, in located in the Aker Brygge area of Oslo[9][10]


Selected works

Skrift og Umskrift i Landsmaalet, 1862
Kvindens stilling i Verden, i Nordisk Maanedsskrift for folkelig og kristelig Oplysning, 1871
Kvinden skabt i Guds Billede, 1878
Kristi kirke i det nittende aarhundrede, 1897
Dikt i (Ivar Aasens) landsmaal. 1862–67, 1908

References

Commemoratives of Famous Women (Notable Women International)
Aasta Hansteen (Lill-Ann Jensen, Store norske leksikon)
Portrait of Aasta Hansteen (The Promise of America)
Aasta Hansteen. 1824 - 1908(Art Experts, Inc.)
Aasta Hansteen (Kristin Natvig Aas, Store norske leksikon)
The Best Place on Earth for Women: The American Experience of Aasta Hansteen (Janet E. Rasmussen. Norwegian-American Historical Association. Volume 31: Page 245)
Hvorfor er vårt symbol en solsikke? (Norsk Kvinnesaksforening)
Dolls House Educational Packet (Desiree Kavanaugh. State University of New York at Oswego, Oswego, NY)
Agathe Backer Grøndahl (1847-1907): "A perfectly plain woman? (Camilla Hambro. The Kapralova Society Journal. 2009)
Nina Sundbye (Store norske leksikon)

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