During his childhood, Henrik Ibsen grew up in a small costal town of Norway, Skien, as the oldest of five children given birth by Knud and Marichen Ibsen. Ibsen’s father was a merchant, and his mother was an artist. This has influenced Ibsen’s interest in arts. When Ibsen turned 8, his father experience failure …show more content…
Ibsen would practice writing and painting during his free time, and in 1849, Ibsen published his first play Catilina. As Ibsen’s first work, Catilina did not receive much attention, but it marked the start of Ibsen’s writing journey.
In 1850, Ibsen moved to Christiania, presently known as Oslo, for university. There, he would meet many other writers and artistic styles. In the following year, Ibsen would meet one of the most important figures in his life, Ole Bull. Ole Bull, a violinist and theater manager, offered Ibsen a job as a writer and manager for the Norwegian Theatre. During this period, Ibsen was able to learn theatrical skills through experience. After 7 years, Ibsen would return to Oslo and manage a theatre there. Though he experienced hardship and criticism, Ibsen was able to complete another notable work, Love's Comedy.
In 1862, Ibsen was exiled to Italy, where he wrote two of his notable works, Brand and Peer Gynt. These writing made Ibsen famous in his native country. In 1862, Ibsen moved to Germany, where he would write his most famous play, A Doll’s house, as he questioned the traditional structure of the society. Later on, Ibsen would move back and forth between to the two nations, creating extraordinary polemical works, Ghosts and Hedda