thumb|right|Johanna i Brunnsparken, 2008. thumb|right|Såningskvinnan in Gothenburg, around 1900. thumb|right|Såningskvinnan at the Folk institute of Bräkne-Hoby. thumb|right|Såningskvinnan, 1919, at the Meyer foundry in Stockholm. Såningskvinnan (), popularly known as Johanna i Brunnsparken (), is a statue of a standing woman in Gothenburg, Sweden, sculpted by Per Hasselberg in 1883. The original gypsum version of the statue remains at the Medicinal history museum of Gothenburg. Såningskvinnan is thought of as the second oldest statue in Gothenburg and its first female statue.
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thumb|right|Johanna i Brunnsparken, 2008. thumb|right|Såningskvinnan in Gothenburg, around 1900. thumb|right|Såningskvinnan at the Folk institute of Bräkne-Hoby. thumb|right|Såningskvinnan, 1919, at the Meyer foundry in Stockholm. Såningskvinnan (), popularly known as Johanna i Brunnsparken (), is a statue of a standing woman in Gothenburg, Sweden, sculpted by Per Hasselberg in 1883. The original gypsum version of the statue remains at the Medicinal history museum of Gothenburg. Såningskvinnan is thought of as the second oldest statue in Gothenburg and its first female statue.
==History== Rittmeister Carl Krook in Helsingborg made a donation of 10 thousand Swedish krona in 1878 to the city of Gothenburg for the purpose that Jonas Reinhold Kjellberg and Carl Kjellberg wanted. They wanted the money to go to build a fountain at Brunnsparken. But as the money was not enough for the artefact they wanted to erect, John West Wilson and Pontus Fürstenberg offered to add the missing amount needed to erect a fountain in accordance to the model made by sculptor Per Hasselberg. The model had received a prize by the society Gnistan named in a contest.
2 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).