1879 - 1971. Known for: Painting, religous motif, altar pieces.
Ellen Hofman-Bang attended Vilhelmine Bangs Tegneskole and subsequently from 1898 to 1902 Kunstakademiet (The Royal Art academy) in Copenhagen under Viggo Johansen. She undertook several travels and...
Read full biography Ellen Hofman-Bang attended Vilhelmine Bangs Tegneskole and subsequently from 1898 to 1902 Kunstakademiet (The Royal Art academy) in Copenhagen under Viggo Johansen. She undertook several travels and study tours - in Paris as a student at the painting school of Blanche and Simons in 1906 and later...
Read full biography Ellen Hofman-Bang attended Vilhelmine Bangs Tegneskole and subsequently from 1898 to 1902 Kunstakademiet (The Royal Art academy) in Copenhagen under Viggo Johansen. She undertook several travels and study tours - in Paris as a student at the painting school of Blanche and Simons in 1906 and later in Italy, the middle east, Greece, Norway, Sweden and England. Until 1948 Hoffmann-Bang exhibited almost every year at Charlottenborg, her work consisting primarily of religious motifs in the shape of...
Read full biography Ellen Hofman-Bang attended Vilhelmine Bangs Tegneskole and subsequently from 1898 to 1902 Kunstakademiet (The Royal Art academy) in Copenhagen under Viggo Johansen. She undertook several travels and study tours - in Paris as a student at the painting school of Blanche and Simons in 1906 and later in Italy, the middle east, Greece, Norway, Sweden and England. Until 1948 Hoffmann-Bang exhibited almost every year at Charlottenborg, her work consisting primarily of religious motifs in the shape of large and often dramatic paintings and altar pieces.
Ellen Hofman-Bang attended Vilhelmine Bangs Tegneskole and subsequently from 1898 to 1902 Kunstakademiet (The Royal Art academy) in Copenhagen under Viggo Johansen. She undertook several travels and study tours - in Paris as a student at the painting school of Blanche and Simons in 1906 and later in Italy, the middle east, Greece, Norway, Sweden and England. Until 1948 Hoffmann-Bang exhibited almost every year at Charlottenborg, her work consisting primarily of religious motifs in the shape of large and often dramatic paintings and altar pieces.