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  1. Copenhagen Blue is a pale, fresh sky blue that has the soft pastel optimism of a Monet painting. Edwardians loved light blues as they are the ultimate colour for opening up a dark room and bouncing maximum light around a space, which was the style of the day and a look which has endured.

  2. The truest and purest blue, cobalt, is used for decorating the classic Royal Copenhagen blue fluted service. Thousands of years before this, from as far back as 2600 BC, Egyptian and various other civilisations used cobalt to create intensely blue colour for glassware, glazing and ceramics.

  3. Irrespective of the colour of the water and the sky, we are still left with a painting that helps define the Golden Age and our ideas about Danishness. The flag is flown – not just for the sake...

  4. Art. The Golden Age. 1800-1850. Origin. The “Golden Age” is a term for the period between ca. 1800 and ca. 1850 in Danish painting. The term “Danish golden age of Painting” can be found in relation to H.C. Ørsted, who described his contemporary as a special spring time.

  5. Read about Venus disarming Amor painted by Joris Hoefnagel. Major Work 08:03:51, 28.05.2009 Danh Vo Read about the chandelier bearing the title 08:03:51, 28.05.2009 by Danh Vo. ... A View of Lake Sortedam from Dosseringen Looking towards the Suburb Nørrebro outside Copenhagen, 1838 Christen Købke About Christen Købke's A View of Lake ...

  6. Do you want to know why the sky is blue, when shadows are long, or how the world would look if it were ‘mirrored’? In Science and Contemporary Art, you can experience new works of art and explore light and space using your senses.

  7. Copenhagen's list of tall, innovative architecture keeps reaching dizzying new heights. Especially with the opening of CopenHill - an 85 meter tall waste-to-energy plant with a ski slope, a climbing wall, a hiking trail and public park on top. Here are the best viewpoints in Copenhagen.