نام درست وی : آدولف لونبورگ است : عکاس دانمارکی
Adolph Lønborg
Adolph Lønborg
Birth 5 September 1835
Nykøbing Falster
Death 27 October 1916(1916-02-02-02
) Frederiksberg
Profession photographer
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Christian Adolph Barfod Lønborg (5 September 1835 – 27 October 1916) was a Danish portrait photographer.
Life and work[edit] edit source]
He was the son of watchmaker Didrik Bech Lonborg and Freda Poulin Priergaard. He trained as a painter, graduated from the Academy of Arts in 1850 and was also a private pupil of Wilhelm Marstrand, receiving a small silver medal from the Academy in 1860.
In 1891 he travelled in Germany and Belgium, and in 1878 he won a bronze medal at the Universal Exhibition in Paris as a photographer of group portraits.
Originally specializing in portrait lithographs, he established himself as a photographer in Nakskov in 1865 and moved to Copenhagen in 1871, where he opened his own photographic studio. He took a liking to the technique of carte de visite photography, which quickly spread in the 1970s as a cheap and attractive alternative to portrait painting. [1] The most famous is probably the profile portrait of the aged Nikolai Frederik Severin Grundtvig, taken in 1872.
This image is in the public domain in Norway because images not considered to be "works of art" become public domain 50 years after creation, provided that more than 15 years have passed since the photographer's death or the photographer is unknown.
Under the former photo law, protection ended 25 years after creation, provided that more than 15 years had passed since the photographer's death or the photographer is unknown. The image is in the public domain if the protection ended before 29 June 1995 under the older term.[1]
To uploader: Please provide information about where the image was first published, who created it, and when the photographer died, if known. The right to be attributed does not expire in Norway.
Images uploaded to Wikimedia Commons must also be in the public domain in the United States. A Norwegian work that is in the public domain in Norway is in the public domain in the U.S. only if it was in the public domain in Norway in 1996 and no copyright was registered in the U.S. (This is the effect of 17 USC 104A with its critical date of January 1, 1996.)