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Showing posts with label Oslo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oslo. Show all posts

October 12, 2024

Visiting Quarantined Family and Friends at Ullevål Hospital, Oslo, Norway in 1905

In the spring of 1905, Ullevål Hospital in Oslo stood as a sentinel against the spread of illness, its walls a barrier between the afflicted and the outside world. The hospital, with its stately architecture and solemn atmosphere, had become a focal point of hope and concern for the city’s residents, as quarantine protocols were strictly enforced to manage the outbreaks that occasionally swept through the region.

(Photo by Anders Beer Wilse)

On a crisp day in early spring, the grounds of Ullevål Hospital were abuzz with an unusual blend of anxiety and determination. Families and friends gathered outside the hospital’s imposing gates, their faces pressed against the iron bars as they tried to catch glimpses of loved ones inside. The air was thick with the mingled scents of spring blossoms and antiseptic, a reminder of the delicate balance between life and health.

Visitors, each with a story of their own, came to offer comfort and solidarity. They carried with them not just parcels of food and letters, but also messages of encouragement wrapped in small, handmade gifts—a knitted scarf, a jar of honey, a cherished book. These tokens, carefully prepared and wrapped, were a testament to the enduring human spirit that transcended the barriers of quarantine.

The scenes at Ullevål were poignant and hopeful. Families held brief, often muted conversations through the windows, their words carried on the breeze between the glass panes. They spoke in hushed tones, their voices occasionally rising with laughter or falling with concern. The visitors' eyes, often teary but resolute, reflected the deep bonds of affection that persisted despite the physical separation.

Inside the hospital, the patients, though separated from their loved ones, found solace in the knowledge that their family and friends were outside, steadfast in their support. The medical staff, too, played a crucial role, providing not just care but also a comforting presence to those isolated from their everyday lives.

This daily ritual of visiting, filled with a mix of longing and encouragement, captured the essence of a time when medical advancements were still catching up with human resilience. The quarantine measures, though stringent, could not diminish the warmth of human connection and the indomitable spirit of those who endured them.

In the heart of Oslo, Ullevål Hospital became more than a place of healing—it was a symbol of hope and solidarity, where the distance imposed by quarantine could not sever the bonds of love and care that defined the community.

July 15, 2021

A Norwegian University Student’s Secret Street Photography From 1890s Oslo

Known mostly as an accomplished mathematician and physicist from Norway, Carl Størmer (Fredrik Carl Mülertz Størmer) also enjoyed a very unusual side hobby at the time. With a bulky camera hidden in his clothes, Størmer walked around Oslo, Norway and secretly capture candid moments of passersby. As his subjects were always caught in their natural states, Størmer’s photography stands in striking contrast to portraiture of the era that largely consisted of serious and grave images against decorative settings.


Most of his photos were taken in the 1890s by using a C.P. Stirn Concealed Vest Spy Camera, which he got in 1893 when he was a 19-year-old student at the Royal Frederick University (now, University of Oslo). “It was a round flat canister hidden under the vest with the lens sticking out through a buttonhole,” he told the St. Hallvard Journal in 1942. “Under my clothes, I had a string down through a hole in my trouser pocket, and when I pulled the string the secret camera took a photo.”

Størmer tended to capture people exactly at the time they were greeting him on the street. “I strolled down Carl Johan, found me a victim, greeted, got a gentle smile, and pulled.” He described. “Six images at a time and then I went home to switch [the] plate.” In total, the Norway's very first paparazzi took a total of about 500 of these black-and-white photos.




November 9, 2017

49 Color Photos That Capture Street Scenes of Oslo, Norway in the 1980s

Founded in the year 1040, Oslo is the capital and the most populous city in Norway. It constitutes both a county and a municipality. The city is the economic and governmental centre of Norway. It is also a hub of Norwegian trade, banking, industry and shipping, and an important centre for maritime industries and maritime trade in Europe.

Oslo is home to many companies within the maritime sector, some of which are among the world's largest shipping companies, shipbrokers and maritime insurance brokers.

These fascinating photos that show you what Oslo looked like in the 1980s.






August 5, 2017

32 Amazing Candid Photographs That Capture Street Scenes of Oslo, Norway in the 1890s

These candid shots were taken between 1893-97 in Oslo, Norway by Carl Størmer (1874-1957), who is one of Norway's pioneer photographers. He is known as an astronomer and mathematician. In history books Størmer is referred to as "The Northern Lights photographer”: he will go down in history as the first person to construct a camera that could capture the Northern Lights.

But it is another of his photographic endeavors that is the basis for this film: The young student Carl Størmer walked around in Christiania (Oslo) from 1893 to 1897 with his detective camera and took everyday pictures of people. In these images we see people in their natural state. It differs very much from the grave and strict posing attitudes that characterize the photos from that time. Størmer’s images capture situations, meetings, reactions and looks. They give a close-up of a world that is long gone.






October 16, 2016

July 11, 2014

A Fashion Show in U.S. Embassy in Oslo, Norway in 1965

These pictures were taken by photographer Klæboe/Billedbladet Nå. The occasion is a fashion show in the U.S. diplomatic residence Villa Otium in Oslo in 1965. This happened under the auspices of Ambassador Lady Margaret Joy Tibbits and air company PAN AM (represented by the company's first marketing manager, Jane Kilbourne.)










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