The 10,000 metres is the longest standard track event; the international distance is equal to 6. He competed at every Winter Olympic Games and World Championships from 1960 to 1970. Grønningen won the 15 km twice 1960 and 1961 at the and earned the in 1961. He developed a wilder, more spontaneous style using a palette knife rather than brush strokes as can be seen in his 1916 , one of his many successful forest works. It is less held at track and field meetings, due to its duration; the 10,000 metre track race is distinguished from its road running counterpart, the 10K run, by its reference to the distance in metres rather than kilometres. This was the third time the Norwegian capital hosted this event having done so in 1930 and at the 1952 Winter Olympics; this equaled the most times a city had hosted with and. However, it was not until 1917 that he adapted his approach to a rather aggressive and dynamic interpretation as can be seen in Sofus Heading from 1917.
Here the landscapes became constructed pictures where the countryside was expressed in a few lush green colours. While run over the same distance, the time was set on a road course and is therefore ineligible to be considered among the top performances listed here. Grønningen won the 15 km twice 1960 and 1961 at the and earned the in 1961. Grønningen was born in Lensvik. Mäntyranta finished 19th in the 30 km event at the 1972 Winter Olympics in. After retiring from competitions he received a degree in physical education from the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences in in 1984. Finally, at the 1932 Olympic Games in Lake Placid, the 38-year-old Grafström was dethroned by Karl Schäfer.
Haakon Brusveen at the Holmenkollen medalists at the — click Holmenkollmedaljen for downloadable pdf file is a former. He died of pneumonia on 15 January 1927. Soon afterwards, Besse's father gave her a small cottage at in the south of where Giersing spend several summers painting some 40 pictures. In protest to this decision his teammate refused to accept his medal in 1980. The event is part of the athletics programme at the and the and is common at championship level events; the race consists of 25 laps around an Olympic-sized track.
Harald Grønningen 9 October 1934 — 26 August 2016 was a Norwegian who competed during the 1960s, earning five and two medals. The 10,000 metres demands exceptional levels of endurance, elite athletes train in excess of 160 km a week. Three Olympic gold medals: 1960 and 1964 two Olympic silver medals: Innsbruck 1964 and 1968 two Olympic bronze medals: Grenoble 1968 two World Championships gold medals: 1962 and 1966, two silver: 1962 and 1966, one bronze: 1966 National domestic championships: five gold, two silver and two bronze championships first place 1962, 1964 and 1968 medal in 1964. His personal best times were 15:03. He competed in the individual 15 km and 4×10 km relay events at the 1956 and 1960 Olympics and won two medals in 1960: a gold in the 15 km and a silver in the relay. . Below is a list of other times equal or superior to 30:17.
While run over the same distance, the time was set on a road course and is therefore not eligible to be considered among the top performances listed here. He competed at the 1972, 1976 and 1980 Olympics in the 15 km, 30 km and 4×10 km events and won a gold medal over 15 km in 1972, he fell near the finish. His painting 1909 presents three female figures with broad dark blue outlines and rather confusing proportions. The Finnish Ministry of Education endowed him with the Pro Urheilu letter of recognition in 2000. Most of those running such races compete in road races and cross country events. When he arrived in in 1906, he was immediately taken by but within a year it was who became his ideal, soon to be followed by and also the neo-impressionist.
Open landscapes followed, especially the Furesø pictures from 1918 on. Members: David Foster, Martin Frank, Jørn Jensen, Carl-Johan Johansson, Taavi Kalju, Martin Kellner, George Masin, Stein Opdahl, Wolf Reinhardt, Ralf Regnitter, Paul Tchir, Magne Teigen, Christian Tugnoli, Morten Aarlia Torp, and Ralf Schlüter. By 1907, he had begun to show interest in the , including , , , and and especially. Official records are kept for outdoor 10,000 metre track events. He came to national prominence in 1959, aged 24, when he was Norwegian Champion over the 15 km distance. Correct as of August 2017.
Correct as of August 2017. Lundbäck took up competitive skiing in 1964, when his family moved from to. While some synergies with the work of can be detected, he differed from contemporaries such as , and in that he sought to represent images just as he had seen them, almost in the form of photographs. He also won nine Norwegian championship titles and received the King's cup in 1963 and 1967. For Giersing, the 1920s did not bring the level of success he might have hoped for. At the 1922 Grønningen exhibition in Copenhagen, Giersing exhibited almost exclusively black and grey pictures such as the 1919 , surprisingly attracting far more positive reviews.
For some reasons Lundbäck did not receive the in 1978. In 1920, the six judges gave Grafström a unanimous victory. He is remembered as one of Denmark's most important 20th-century artists both for his portraits and landscapes. There is a museum centered on Mäntyranta in his birthplace of. He also won nine Norwegian championship titles and received the King's cup in 1963 and 1967.