Berndt Godenhjelm | |
Birth Name: | Berndt Abraham Godenhjelm |
Birth Date: | 30 March 1799 |
Birth Place: | Mäntyharju, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire (now Finland) |
Death Place: | Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire (now Finland) |
Nationality: | Finnish |
Field: | Painting |
Berndt Abraham Godenhjelm (March 30, 1799 - 14 December 1881) was a Finnish painter.[1]
Godenhjelm was born in Mäntyharju. His parents were the county surveyor Adolf Fredrik Godenhjelm and Maria Elizabeth Argillander. His wife was Alexandra Fredrika Hornborg (died 1871). Their son B. F. Godenhjelm became a teacher.[1]
He studied landscape painting in Stockholm under, and later he studied copper drawing in Saint Petersburg.[2] He initially began his career in the courts, where he worked as an articled clerks deputy judge in 1826. However soon after he transitioned to painting, primarily producing commissioned works for churches and portraits.[1]
During his career, he painted dozens of altarpieces including ones for the Mäntyharju church, the Lovage church, the Liperi church (1842), the Jämsä church (1848), the Ikaalinen church (1874) and Finnish Lutheran Church in Sitka, Alaska founded by Uno Cygnaeus in 1840. Some of his works have been preserved at the and the National Museum of Finland. Godenhjelm was head teacher at the Academy of Fine Arts, Helsinki drawing school from 1848 to 1869.[3] He was an honorary member of the in 1864, and a board member of the Finnish Art Society from 1852 to 1868.[1]