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- Events
Dedicated to Norway's most famous sculptor, Gustav Vigeland...
- Visitor information
The Vigeland Museum is a building listed as a protected...
- Collection
The Vigeland Museum's collection comprises 1 600 sculptures,...
- Gustav Vigeland
Gustav Vigeland (1869-1943) is Norway's most famous...
- Vigeland Park
The Monolith. The Wheel of Life. The Wrought Iron Art....
- The Museum
The Vigeland Museum opened in 1947 and is Gustav Vigeland's...
- Chronology
Born on 11 April in Mandal, Southern Norway, the second...
- The Monolith
The sculpture depicts 121 human figures clinging and...
- About The Collection
Search the photo collection. Vigeland in his new studio at...
- Events
The Vigeland Museum ( Norwegian: Vigelandmuseet) is a museum dedicated to Gustav Vigeland in Frogner, Oslo. It is located outside Frogner Park, which includes the Vigeland installation with sculptures by Gustav Vigeland. The museum is part of Oslo municipality's cultural department.
The Vigeland Museum. Vigeland Sculpture Park. Traces of Vigeland elsewhere in Oslo. Most of Vigeland’s works in Oslo are gathered in the Vigeland Sculpture Park and the Vigeland Museum. But you can also see three monuments created by Vigeland right in the city centre, all located near the Royal Palace.
Sculpture museum located in the studio and home of sculptor Gustav Vigeland (1869-1943). The building is regarded as one of the finest examples of neo-classical architecture in Norway. The museum's collection comprises Vigeland's early works, his portraits and monuments, as well as plaster models for the sculptures in Vigeland Park.
Sculpture park in the Frogner Park with more than 200 sculptures by Gustav Vigeland (1869–1943) in bronze, granite and cast iron, including The Angry Boy ( Sinnataggen in Norwegian), The Monolith ( Monolitten) and The Wheel of Life ( Livshjulet ).