September 2024
The Nobel Peace Center building was purchased from Consul General Christophersen in 1903. The architects Carl and Jørgen Berner were commissioned to reconstruct it. Carl Berner designed much of the interior in the “art nouveau” style popular at the time, as opposed to the neo-classical design of the exterior. When the Nobel Committee members convene, they still sit around the table designed by Jørgen Berner in 1905. – The ceremonies are now held in the City Hall.
Oslo City Hall
Oslo City Hall was constructed between 1931 and 1950, with an interruption during the Second World War. It was designed by architects Arnstein Arneberg and Magnus Poulsson.
There are 16 wood reliefs by Dagfin Werenskiold face the square and are multicolored depictions of motifs from the Poetic Edda of Norse mythology concerning the life of gods and the stories of wisdom and love, war and hate, and visions of the future.
When you enter City Hall you do so in a giant room that is adorned with murals and a stunning marble floor. This room is where the Nobel Prize is awarded.
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A marble plaque representing the tmedieval poem of the Poetic Edda that describes how the world might have come into shape and would end according to Norse mythology. According to this literary text, the beginning of the world was characterized by nothingness until the gods created the nine realms of Norse cosmology, somehow linked by the World Tree, Yggdrasil.
I didn’t have a photo that really showed the enormity of the room. This is from Norway with Pal, a great website about all things Oslo.
This is just a small sampling of the amazing artwork in Oslo City Hall. I must return someday and spend more time seeing the rest of the building.