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...Bishop of Oslo had refused to marry her to the divorced commoner, but last week Norway's Princess Astrid, 28, followed a torchlight procession into a small, red-brick Lutheran church outside town to wed prosperous Haberdasher Johan Martin Ferner, 33, and to be read out of royalty. The procession, which was led through 10°-below-zero cold by Astrid's sister, Princess Ragnhild (who had married a commoner in the same church seven years before), included uncommon cousins from three European kingdoms, among them a sympathetic Princess Margaret of Britain. Last came Astrid and her father...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jan. 20, 1961 | 1/20/1961 | See Source »

Last week 102 paintings of the Henie-Onstad collection were on view in Oslo, the first time they had ever been shown in public (see color). Norwegians have been so eager to see the show that the railroads offered special rates to take people to Oslo. Apart from some paintings, apparently bought more for prestige than merit, the collection as a whole dazzled both public and critics. This week the exhibit packs up to start a grand tour that will take it to Copenhagen, Stockholm, Hamburg, The Hague, Zurich, Paris, London and possibly New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Marriage Go-Round | 1/6/1961 | See Source »

...Canada's Pollock-like abstract expressionist, Jean-Paul Riopelle. Bonnard. Villon, Matisse, Picasso, Leger, Poliakoff and Rouault are all represented. One of Paul Klee's best-known works. Seven O'Clock over the Roofs, looks like a toy town built with brown and greenish blocks. Oslo had never seen a finer group of Juan Crises, nor had it been exposed to Surrealist Max Ernst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Marriage Go-Round | 1/6/1961 | See Source »

Paintings by modern Americans, increasingly sought and sold by Europe's private galleries and collectors, are beginning to trickle into a few big public European museums. For its first work by an American of any period, the National Gallery of Norway in Oslo last week got a wistful and lyric portrait called Albert's Son, by Andrew Wyeth, perhaps the most commercially successful of serious U.S. artists. At the other end of the artistic spectrum, the Tate Gallery in London announced that as the first work to be hung in its new American Wing it had acquired...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Americans Abroad | 12/5/1960 | See Source »

...nautical Princess Astrid, 28, has been known to her countrymen as "the sad one." Her sadness began in 1951, when her father, King Olaf V, himself a topnotch sailor, searched for a good hand to sail in Sunday regattas with his daughter. On deck soon came a prosperous Oslo clothier, Johan Martin Ferner, one of Scandinavia's most eligible bachelors but. alas, a commoner. The pair became discreetly inseparable. In 1953 Astrid's older sister, Princess Ragnhild, married a shipowner and sailed off to Rio de Janeiro. Convinced that one commoner in the royal family was enough, Olaf...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Nov. 28, 1960 | 11/28/1960 | See Source »

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