12 May 2026

Denmark's Golden Age 1800-50: Hansen

The Golden Age (c1800-50) was an era of impressive creat­ivity in Denmark. Although Copenhagen had suffered from fires, bomb­ard­ment and bank­ruptcy, the centre of Denmark's intell­ectual life, first experienced huge fir­es in 1794 and 1795 which dest­royed both Chr­is­tiansborg Palace­ and much of the inner city. The arts took on a new era of cr­eat­ivity, imbued by German Romanticism. Danes from the arts and scienc­es became in­volved in a new era of Roman­tic nation­al­ism. Change became apparent, esp­ in painting. 

Wilhelm Bendz, another student of Eckersberg
Artist in the Evening at Finck's Coffee House 
in MunichThorvaldsen Museum, 1832

The early C19th was a tough time for Denmark-Norway. The crucial fig­ure was Christoffer Eckers­berg who taught at the Acad­emy­ from 1818-53, had an imp­or­t­ant in­fluence on the next gen­erat­ion, including Wilh­elm Bendz and Const­antin Hansen. While art had prev­iously served the monarchy and the Establish­ment, Henrik Steffens (1773–1845) and his st­udents real­ised that the moneyed classes were increas­ingly gaining pow­er and influence, now industr­ial­isa­tion was starting. Grand historical art gave way to more appealing and less grand art; genre painting em­er­ged, with int­eriors and portraits depicting the middle and upper class­es. Students liked to stud­y in Paris with Jacques-Louis David.

Copenhagen on Fire by CW Eck­er­s­berg (1807) showed how Copenhagen exp­erienced the fir­es. In the Golden Age, Copen­hagen in particular acqu­ired a new look as ar­chitects inspired by neo-classicism repaired much of the damage caused by fire in 1795 and by British bombardment of the city. In 1800 Hansen was charged with rebuilding the Pa­l­ace!

In 1801, because of the coun­try's invo­l­vement in the League of Armed Neutrality, the Royal Navy success­fully att­acked a Danish fleet at the Battle of Copenhagen. In 1807, on rum­ours that the French might force Denmark-Norway to close the Bal­tic to their shipping, the British bom­barded and burned large port­ions of Copenhagen. Then in 1813, because the country couldn’t support the war costs, the Danish-Norwegian gov­ernment declared bankruptcy. Wor­se, Norway ceased to be part of the Oldenburg realms when it was ceded to Sweden in Treaty of Kiel (1814).

Yet these crises provided new prospects for Copenhagen. Ar­chitects and planners wid­ened the streets where beautifully desig­ned Neoclass­ical buildings became smarter. With 100,000 people, the smallish city had been built within the confines of the old ramp­arts.

So the lead­ing figures met sharing ideas, unit­ing arts & scien­ces. The main proponent of Classicism in the Golden age was Constantin Han­sen who de­v­eloped a severe style, with large surfaces, in­sp­ired by ancient Greek & Roman architecture. From 1800 he was in charge of all major building projects in Copenhagen where he designed Copen­hagen’s Townhall and Court­house (1805–15), and rebuilt the Church of Our Lady and the square (1811–29). Interior scenes and small portrait gr­oups were also common, with dom­estic objects and furniture, often the art­ist's circle of friends. Danish-trained leader of Ger­man Rom­antic painting Cas­p­ar David Fried­rich was import­ant in spread­ing infl­uence in Germany.

The Golden Age launched a distinct national style for the first time since the Middle Ages. Its style drew on Dutch Gol­d­en Age painting, es­pecially land­scape painting, depicting northern light that was soft, with strong colour contrasts. An idealised version of real­ity.

Const­antin Hansen (1804–80) was born in Rome, son of portrait paint­er Hans Han­sen. The family soon moved to Vienna where Wolfgang Am­ad­eus Mozart’s wid­­ow was his godmother, and with­­in a year, they moved to Co­p­­enhagen. Constantin studied Archit­ect­ure at the Building Sch­ool of the Royal Danish Ac­ademy of Art at 12, but later changed to paint­ing, begin­ning his tr­aining under Christoffer Eckersberg.

Constantin was very in­t­er­­est­ed in literature and mythol­ogy, in­spired by Niels Høyen who want­ed to recr­eate a national hist­or­ical art based on Norse myth­ol­ogy. Høyen, who taught at the Academy, enc­ouraged his st­udents to do landscape painting, especially Danish coun­try scenes.

Paintings by Eckersberg, Ch­risten Købke and Constantin Hansen, using their Italian views, showed the imp­ortant as­p­ects which revealed the Danish Gol­d­­en Age creative process. In 1835 Hansen received a 3-year salary to travel abroad, taking him via Ber­l­in, Dresden, Prague, Nur­emberg and Munich en route to Italy, where he stayed longer in Ro­me, Nap­les and Pomp­eii, and travelled with fellow-Danes. 

Constantin Hansen
A Group of Danish Artists in Rome, 1837
National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen

Copenhagen Art Union commissioned a Hansen painting, A Group of Danish Artists in Rome 1837. This ser­ious work stood out among the pictures of carefree Italian-living that Danish audien­ces enjoyed. The Danish paint­ers and archit­ec­ts in the Rom­an hotel room were Hansen him­­self, Mic­h­­ael Bin­­­d­es­bøll, Mart­inus Rør­b­ye, Wilhelm Marstrand, Küch­ler, Ditlev Blun­ck, Jørg­en Son­ne were gathered to soc­ialise together; but the purpose of the assem­b­ly was to dis­cuss art! Arch­itect Michael Bindes­bøll (1800-56) was re­l­ating the exper­ien­ces of his Greek tra­v­els while the other artists list­en­ed with vary­ing deg­rees of attent­ion. Han­s­en was very ambitious, being insp­ired by Renaissance dep­ictions of artists, suit­ing them to cont­em­porary ideals. He also painted many al­­t­ar­pieces and portr­aits eg Fathers of the  Dan­ish Constituent Assem­bly of 1848. 
 
Fathers of the Dan­ish Constituent Assem­bly 1848
painted by Hansen in 1861
Frederiksborg Museum, Copenhagen

The Golden Age had also seen the develop­ment of Neoclassical Danish arch­itecture, mus­ic, ballet, lit­er­at­ure (eg Hans Ch­ristian And­er­sen), philosophy (eg Søren Kierk­eg­aard) and scien­ce. The Golden Age thus had a profound effect across life in Denmark and even outside.

End of the Golden Age
Danish culture suffered from the First Schleswig War (1848-51). Add­it­ionally, polit­ical reforms involved the end of the ab­solute monarchy in 1848 and the adoption of the Danish constitution in 1849. Finally note that the extension of Copenhagen beyond the old ramparts, during the 1850s, enabled urban exp­an­sion. 




19 comments:

roentare said...

An extraordinary summary of how catastrophe, nationalism and artistic idealism converged to create Denmark’s Golden Age

Bruun Rasmussen said...

Constantin Hansen began his education with his father, the portrait painter Hans Hansen. Under his influence, he took an early interest in portrait painting in the tradition of Jens Juel, who was his father’s great role model. In 1816, Constantin Hansen started at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, switching to the Academy’s Schools of Visual Arts in 1825. In 1829, he became a student of C.W Eckersberg. Under Eckersberg’s influence, Constantin Hansen developed a keen interest in architectural painting, and when he received a travel grant in 1835, he headed to Italy and Rome to study the ancient buildings in particular.

Andrew said...

Australians are quite ignorant about Scandinavia but I know a little more. Btw, I am watching a very interesting tv programme about Labassa.

Joe said...

Denmark is half the size of Tasmania! If the plane had overrun the airport runway, I would have ended up in the water south of Oslo. So how did a country so small have such a impressive Golden Age?

Margaret D said...

There have been a few fires over there unfortunately over the many years. I've been educated more by what you have shared, Hels. Thank you.

jabblog said...

Why do we not hear more about Denmark's Golden Age?

diane b said...

Another interesting history lesson. For such a small country they have a wealth of Art history. The Danes are good at design too. Bill's wheely walker was made in Denmark. It is only 5 k and easy to lift into a car boot.

hels said...

roentare,
What an extraordinary period it was, regarding music, art, architecture, science and literature. The intellectuals and universities must have encouraged each other, and ensured that the work (and incomes) were available.

hels said...

Bruun,
I hadn't thought much about Hansen's close interest in architecture. It certainly influenced the paintings I included, and many other internal architectures that I did not have space to include.

hels said...

Andrew
I think I knew every amazing Dutch artist in the 17th century, during the Golden Age in the Lowlands. Yet you are right. Most of us knew little about Denmark's Golden Age.

hels said...

Jo
Denmark's mainland was indeed tiny but they had a commitment to culture and science that must have outshone Tasmania's (and every other state's) passions in the early 19th century.

hels said...

Margaret
The crises in and against Denmark must have been horrible - fires, bombings, naval struggles etc. it was a brave nation that rebuilt its country against the vast strength of its neighbours.

Even the nation's constitution appeared during this Golden Age.

hels said...

jabblog,
Great question. Perhaps some of our readers might suggest an answer. I will certainly read around for a few days.

hels said...

Diane
The Golden Age valued quality craftsmanship, functionality and combining art and science. No wonder their designs did well.

River said...

The paintings look so real, like they could be photographs. I read a book titled "The Year of Living Danishly" but there wasn't much about it's History or the Golden Age. More about the customs and lifestyle when a London couple moved there because the husband got a job in the Lego company.

Hels said...

Well spotted River.
Hansen was well known for his interest in photography. But most people would not have made the link between his very realistic portraits and historical paintings on one hand, and photographic detail on the other. Have a look, for example, at his "View of Casa di Ariadne in Pompeii".

Neuer Gartentraum said...

This was a fascinating and beautifully detailed overview of the Danish Golden Age. What struck me most is the contrast between the political and social hardships of the period and the remarkable creative energy that emerged from them.

I especially enjoyed the way you connected art, architecture, literature and philosophy into one larger cultural movement rather than treating them separately. It gives a vivid sense of how deeply interconnected creative life in Copenhagen must have been at that time.

The paintings you included add so much atmosphere as well. “A Group of Danish Artists in Rome” feels almost like a snapshot of an intellectual world in motion.

Your post also reminds us how often periods of crisis unexpectedly give rise to important cultural renewal.

Very engaging and informative reading.

Hels said...

Neuer
After the miseries of the C19th, intellectuals thought that national unity and culture would plan for a better future. The need for beauty, literature and science grew, and not just for the grand upper class. So yes, deeply interconnected creative life in Copenhagen must have worked well at the time.
However I am not sure that crises these days give rise to important cultural renewal. Since the wars in Ukraine and Iran, we have seen communties divide, killings increase and angry mobs filling our streets.

Hels said...

Sorry Neuer,
typo. I meant the miseries of the late 18th century-very early 19th century.