
Ellen Bodil
Neergaard née Hartmann (10 February 1867 – 18 May 1959) was a Danish philanthropist and patron of the arts. She is remembered for her many charitable activities as well as for her life in
Fuglsang Manor on the island of
Lolland
Lolland (; formerly spelled ''Laaland'', literally "low land") is the List of islands of Denmark#List of 100 largest Danish islands, fourth largest island of Denmark, with an area of . Located in the Kattegat, Belts and Sund area, it is part of Re ...
where, together with her husband Rolf Viggo de Neergaard, she hosted every summer prominent artists and musicians.
Early life and family background
Born on 10 February 1867 in Copenhagen, Ellen Bodil Hartmann was the daughter of composer
Emil Hartmann (1836–1898) and Bolette Puggaard (1844–1929). Her paternal grandfather,
J.P.E. Hartmann, was also a renowned composer while her maternal grandfather,
Rudolph Puggaard was a prosperous merchant, patron of the arts and philanthropist.
Hans Christian Andersen
Hans Christian Andersen ( , ; 2 April 1805 – 4 August 1875) was a Danish author. Although a prolific writer of plays, travelogue (literature), travelogues, novels, and poems, he is best remembered for his literary fairy tales.
Andersen's fai ...
was her godfather. She was thus brought up in a home with cultural interests and contacts, where the writers, artists and musicians of the times went in and out.
Marriage to Viggo Neergaard
On 2 May 1885, she married Rolf Viggo Neergaard (1837–1915), a cousin, and himself a philanthropist and amateur cellist, who owned the Fuglsang and Priorskov estates, one of the most extensive properties in the Eastern provinces. The couple moved into Fuglsang Manor, to which Bodil Neergaard brought the paintings inherited from her family mostly by masters of the Danish Golden age such as Wilhelm Marstrand, Constantin Hansen, Jørgen Sonne, Peter Christian Skovgaard, Jørgen Roed, Christen Købke, Ditlev Blunck, Christian Albrecht Jensen
Christian Albrecht Jensen (26 June 1792 – 13 July 1870) was a Danish portrait painter who was active during the Golden Age of Danish Painting in the first half of the 19th century. Painting more than 400 portraits over the course of his ca ...
, Vilhelm Kyhn, but also later painters such as Kristian Zahrtmann
Peder Henrik Kristian Zahrtmann, known as Kristian Zahrtmann, (31 March 1843 – 22 June 1917) was a Danish painter. He was a part of the Danish artistic generation in the late 19th century, along with Peder Severin Krøyer and Theodor Philipsen, ...
and Otto Bache, as well as sculptures by Bertel Thorvaldsen
Albert Bertel Thorvaldsen (; sometimes given as Thorwaldsen; 19 November 1770 – 24 March 1844) was a Danes, Danish-Icelanders, Icelandic Sculpture, sculptor and medallist, medalist of international fame, who spent most of his life (1797–183 ...
, Herman Wilhelm Bissen
Herman Wilhelm Bissen (13 October 1798 – 10 March 1868) was a Danish sculptor. Bissen created a number of public works, working in plaster, marble and bronze.
The National Gallery of Denmark owns a collection of over two hundred of his ...
, Carl Hartmann or Carl Frederik Holbech. Further works by Fuglsang guests such as Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen or Rudolph Tegner were later added.
Many of the leading Scandinavian musicians of the day also came to stay in Fuglsang. They would often live there for several weeks in a row, particularly in the summer months. During the day, they would enjoy the free life in the beautiful surroundings, sail to the small islands in Guldborgsund, have tea there, or compose in their rooms, and in the evening, after a fine dinner, where the table was always decorated with varied artistic flower arrangements, daily concerts were played for mutual enjoyment by the guests in the large and beautiful music room. Every evening, the concerts were different and they would usually include three major works of the repertoire and also often new creations by guests of the house.
Cultural interests
A strong supporter of the arts, Bodil Neergaard invited many cultural personalities to Fuglsang. Carl Nielsen
Carl August Nielsen (; 9 June 1865 – 3 October 1931) was a Danish composer, conductor, and violinist, widely recognized as his country's most prominent composer.
Brought up by poor yet musically talented parents on the island of Funen, he d ...
in particular was a close friend and frequent visitor.[ Nielsen's String Quartet No. 4 in F major was first performed privately at Fuglsang in August 1906.] Or Nielsen would play for the guests on the piano his newly composed opera Maskarade even before it was put on stage. Nielsen wrote various works in Fuglsang. He composed '' At the Bier of a Young Artist'' for Bodil’s brother, the painter Oluf Hartmann's funeral in 1910.
Edvard Grieg
Edvard Hagerup Grieg ( , ; 15 June 18434 September 1907) was a Norwegian composer and pianist. He is widely considered one of the leading Romantic music, Romantic era composers, and his music is part of the standard classical repertoire worldwid ...
was also a popular guest and friend and among those who played the grand piano in the music room and his wife Nina regularly played herself and sang.
Beyond the members of Bodil’s own Hartmann musical family - above all Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann and Emil Hartmann -, other musicians who regularly visited Fuglsang included August Winding, Asger Hamerik and his wife Margaret Hamerik, C. F. E. Horneman, Johan Svendsen, Franz Neruda, Angul Hammerich and his wife Golla Hammerich, and also Emil Telmányi, Johanne Stockmarr, Fridtjof Backer-Groendahl and a long list of other leading Scandinavian musicians of the day.
The soul of the musical life in Fuglsang over many decades was however Julius Röntgen, who came every year for long periods together with his six musical sons as well as his wife Amanda Maier (and after her decease his second wife, Abrahamina des Amorie van der Hoeven, a pianist). Julius Röntgen had an immense repertoire and followed with curiosity any novelty in the musical world. He participated both as pianist and violist and liked occasionally to bring along musicians, often from the Netherlands, such as Peter van Anrooy, Gerard Van Brucken Fock, or Johannes Messchaert or the Austrian Oskar Posa.
And in later years, also composers of the younger generation in the family, in particular Niels Rudolph Gade, Ebbe Hamerik and foremost Niels Viggo Bentzon took part in the daily musical soirées.
Bodil Neergaard was herself a fine soprano, who had been educated in Paris as a professional singer by Désirée Artôt de Padilla and was a regular participant in the concerts held every evening in the summer months in the music room. Désirée Artôt, and her daughter Lola Artôt were also guests.
Philanthropy
When her husband died in 1915, Bodil Neergaard took over the management of both estates and continued the cultural activities as before. Inspired by Pastor Johannes Munck of Møltrup Manor in Jutland, she however became also increasingly socially active. Her friend Mathilda Wrede gave her the idea to establish the Sønderskov Home ('' Sønderskovhjemmet'') on her property to house up to 17 men suffering from lack of employment. Initially she covered all the costs herself but from 1923 it became an independent institution.[ The institution has since grown significantly and has recently celebrated its hundred year anniversary. Her charitable interests extended to providing holiday camp lodgings for some 50 boys from the capital to spend their summers near the shores of Guldborgsund while she made another building available to the writer Aage Falk Hansen for housing those in need. She adapted the main building on the Flintingegård estate for elderly women from Copenhagen to spend a few weeks in the country, inviting them in groups of 10 at a time. In 1919, she bought the old school in Toreby so that it could be used by the YMCA and YWCA.][
]
Death and legacy
Bodil Neergaard spent the rest of her life at Fuglsang where she died on 18 May 1959. In 1947, she had transferred all her property and possessions to the charitable foundation, Det Classenske Fideicommis.[ She is buried in Toreby Churchyard.
Today, Fuglsang hosts a ]cultural center
A cultural center or cultural centre is an organization, building or complex that promotes culture and arts. Cultural centers can be neighborhood community arts organizations, private facilities, government-sponsored, or activist-run.
Africa
* ...
, with its own musical ensemble
A musical ensemble, also known as a music group, musical group, or a band is a group of people who perform Instrumental music, instrumental and/or vocal music, with the ensemble typically known by a distinct name. Some music ensembles consist ...
, music association, concert hall and a fine arts museum.
Awards
In 1947, Bodil Neergaard was honoured with the Medal of Merit for her extensive social and philanthropical contributions.[ Explaining why she undertook so much social work, Neergaard simply commented: "I wanted so much to help."][
The ]Bodil Neergaard
Ellen Bodil Neergaard (noble family), Neergaard née Hartmann (10 February 1867 – 18 May 1959) was a Danish philanthropist and patron of the arts. She is remembered for her many charitable activities as well as for her life in Fuglsang Manor on ...
apple cultivar
A cultivar is a kind of Horticulture, cultivated plant that people have selected for desired phenotypic trait, traits and which retains those traits when Plant propagation, propagated. Methods used to propagate cultivars include division, root a ...
is named after her. The variety was found circa 1850 in a field fence at Flintinge on Lolland. The street Bodil Neergård Vænget in Odense
Odense ( , , ) is the third largest city in Denmark (after Copenhagen and Aarhus) and the largest city on the island of Funen. As of 1 January 2025, the city proper had a population of 185,480 while Odense Municipality had a population of 210, ...
is also named after her.
Publications
Bodil Neergaard wrote memoirs describing her life at Fuglsang, published in 1941 and 1944 in Danish as ''Spedte træk af mit Liv'', and as ''Minder fra Fuglsang: Mennesker jeg mødte gennem et langt Liv'' (''Memories of Fuglsang: People I Met During a Long Life'').
Literature
* Bodil Neergaard, ''Minder fra Fuglsang: Mennesker jeg mødte gennem et langt Liv (Erindringer)'', 1944
* Bodil Neergaard, ''Spedte træk af mit liv (Erindringer)'', 1941
* Bodil Neergaard, ''Hendes Slægt og Virke, Skildret af Familie og Venner'', 1948
* ''Fuglsang 1885-1959, Billedkunst, Musik og Friluftsliv'', Fuglsang Kunstmuseum 2015
* Fritz von Bessendorf, ''Fuglsang, Kan svanerne komme tilbage?'', 2017
*Halfdan Grøndal Hansen, ''Fuglsang, Bodil Neergaards Hjem''
*Toke Lund Christiansen, ''Jeg Bodil'', Forlaget Vandkunsten, 2023, 156 pages
''See also''
* Fuglsang Art Museum
References
External links
Illustrated biography of Bodil Neergaard
from Toreby Sogn's ''Orientering'' (in Danish)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Neergaard, Bodil
1867 births
1959 deaths
People from Copenhagen
Danish philanthropists
Danish women philanthropists
Danish women memoirists
19th-century Danish memoirists
20th-century Danish memoirists
19th-century Danish male writers
19th-century Danish women writers
20th-century Danish landowners
20th-century Danish women landowners
20th-century Danish women writers
Danish art collectors
Hartmann family
Puggaard family
Neergaard family (Danish)
Recipients of the Medal of Merit (Denmark)