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Hamlet Delivering a Letter Written by Himself to the Queen of Scotland

Hamlet Delivering a Letter Written by Himself to the Queen of Scotland

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Hierarchy at its Peak at the time of the Crusades

Hierarchy at its Peak at the time of the Crusades

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Rome as Ruler of the World

Rome as Ruler of the World

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Ymir Suckling the Cow Audhumla

Ymir Suckling the Cow Audhumla

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Absolute Monarchy Assigned to Frederik III in 1660

Absolute Monarchy Assigned to Frederik III in 1660

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Christian III Succeeding Denmark

Christian III Succeeding Denmark

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Christian V Presents Danish Law 1683

Christian V Presents Danish Law 1683

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Fingal Sees the Ghosts of his Forefathers by Moonlight

Fingal Sees the Ghosts of his Forefathers by Moonlight

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Frederik V as Patron of Science and the Arts

Frederik V as Patron of Science and the Arts

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Hamlet and his Mother. Episode from Shakspeare's Hamlet

Hamlet and his Mother. Episode from Shakspeare's Hamlet

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Male Figure. After Michelangelo's Last Judgement in the Sistine Chapel

Male Figure. After Michelangelo's Last Judgement in the Sistine Chapel

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Jurisprudence. Allegorical Figure

Jurisprudence. Allegorical Figure

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Niels Klim in Potu

Niels Klim in Potu

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Niels Klim thinks he hears the Deacon when he is awakened by a Bull

Niels Klim thinks he hears the Deacon when he is awakened by a Bull

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Ossian Singing His Swan Song

Ossian Singing His Swan Song

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Pamphilius and his sevant Davus. From Terence's Andria

Pamphilius and his sevant Davus. From Terence's Andria

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Philosophy. Allegorical figure.

Philosophy. Allegorical figure.

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Simo and his former slave Sosia. From Terence's Andria.

Simo and his former slave Sosia. From Terence's Andria.

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The Abolition of Adscription in 1788

The Abolition of Adscription in 1788

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The Greek Poet Anacreon and Bathyll

The Greek Poet Anacreon and Bathyll

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The Greek Poet Sappho and the Girl from Mytilene

The Greek Poet Sappho and the Girl from Mytilene

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The Midwife Taking Leave of the girl from Andros. From Terence's Andria

The Midwife Taking Leave of the girl from Andros. From Terence's Andria

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The Oath of Fealty in 1660

The Oath of Fealty in 1660

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The Slave Davus and the Maid Mysis. From Terence's Andria.

The Slave Davus and the Maid Mysis. From Terence's Andria.

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Kunstdrucke von Nicolai Abildgaard

Collection: Art prints by Nicolai Abildgaard

Nicolai Abildgaard was a Danish painter and is considered one of the most important representatives of Classicism and Northern European Enlightenment painting. He was born in Copenhagen in 1743 and grew up in an artistic environment - his father was a draughtsman and connoisseur of antiquities, which brought the young Nicolai into contact with the world of images and ideas at an early age. He received his education at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, where he proved to be an exceptionally talented student and eventually received a scholarship that enabled him to take the decisive step: a trip to Rome.

In Italy, where he lived and worked from 1772 to 1777, Abildgaard found his true artistic language. His encounters with ancient sculpture, Renaissance frescoes and the works of his contemporary colleagues - including the Swiss Johann Heinrich Füssli, with whom he had a close friendship - had a profound impact on him. Abildgaard did not seek a painterly depiction of the visible world, but rather the representation of thought, dream and inner vision. His paintings derive from mythology, ancient poetry, the Nordic sagas and the literature of Shakespeare and Ossian. They are imbued with a peculiar darkness and intensity that sets him apart from the cool harmonies of many of his classicist contemporaries.

After his return to Copenhagen, Abildgaard quickly rose to become a central player in Danish artistic life. He became professor and eventually director of the Academy of Fine Arts, a position he held with great creative drive. As a teacher, he influenced an entire generation of Danish artists, including Caspar David Friedrich and Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, who would later become the founder of Danish Golden Painting. Abildgaard saw the academy as a place not only for craftsmanship but also for intellectual education, and he demanded that his students engage with philosophy, history and literature.

His own work is characterized by an unusual thematic range and intellectual depth. His best-known works include the illustrations for the works of the Roman poet Apuleius and a series of paintings for Shakespeare's Hamlet, in which he evokes the spirit of the murdered king with a forcefulness that goes far beyond mere illustration. Abildgaard also demonstrated a pioneering spirit and a sensitivity for the dark and sublime in his preoccupation with Nordic mythology - a subject that had hardly been explored in painting at the time - which identifies him as an early forerunner of Romanticism.

In addition to painting, Abildgaard devoted himself with remarkable energy to arts and crafts and architecture. He designed furniture, interiors and decorative objects of high aesthetic stringency, combining antique forms with a modern sense of form. This multifaceted activity makes him a key figure not only in Danish but also in Northern European art and cultural history at the end of the 18th century.

Nicolai Abildgaard died in Copenhagen in 1809 and left behind an oeuvre of lasting influence. His combination of classical erudition and visionary imagination, of antique formal awareness and romantic foreboding, makes him one of the most fascinating figures of his era. Today, his works are preserved in the collections of the National Gallery of Denmark and other important museums and are seen as significant contributions to a European painting that sought new ways of seeing and thinking in the transition between the Enlightenment and Romanticism.