Angry Boy - Sinnataggen at Vigeland Park

The most famous angry face in Norway. It captures a universal human emotion so perfectly that it makes people laugh in recognition, regardless of their language.

This is the "Mona Lisa" of Oslo—and just like the Mona Lisa, you might be surprised by how small he actually is. Standing on the bridge in Vigeland Sculpture Park, Sinnataggen (The Angry Boy) is a bronze sculpture of a toddler having a furious, foot-stomping tantrum.

Despite being just one of 58 statues on the bridge, he has become the unofficial mascot of the park. His face is contorted in a scream that every parent recognizes immediately. When you approach him, you will notice his left hand and genitals are gleaming gold, while the rest of his body is dark green/black. This is due to millions of tourists touching him for "good luck." Insider Plea: Please do not touch him. The acids and oils from human skin are eroding the metal, threatening to destroy the detail over time. The park conservators are constantly begging tourists to look, not touch.


In 1992, Sinnataggen was actually stolen (someone sawed him off at the ankle). He was found in a ditch 11 days later. If you look very closely at his left ankle, you can still see the faint scar from the welding repair.

Highlights


The "Tantrum" Selfie: It is the classic photo op—stand next to him and mimic his angry face/stomp (just don't hold his hand).
Look at the Father: Most people ignore the statue directly opposite Sinnataggen, which shows a father happily swinging a child in the air—it provides the context of "joy" to contrast the "anger."

Best time to go


Before 10:00 AM. Once the tour buses arrive, there is literally a queue to take a photo with him. Go early, or go at sunset when the light hits the bridge horizontally.

Time needed


A few minutes

Getting there


Located on the bridge inside the Vigeland Sculpture Park. Walk straight through the wrought-iron gates, pass the open lawn, and you will hit the bridge.

What to do nearby


2.5km Insider pick
A preserved polar exploration ship with connected exhibition galleries that let visitors board the vessel and examine original expedition equipment and ship construction in close detail.
2.6km
See three internationally important Viking Age burial ships, including the exceptionally complete Oseberg, and the associated grave goods that provide direct evidence of 9th-century shipbuilding and elite burial practice.
2.7km
Experience the human story of Norwegian resistance during Nazi occupation (1940-1945) through atmospheric dark-to-light museum design, illegal newspapers hidden in firewood, saboteur equipment concealed in fish barrels, and the Heavy Water Sabotage that stopped Germany's nuclear program

Hotels nearby


2.4km
You're on Oslo's most central street, steps from the Parliament, the Palace, and the train station.
2.4km
A centrally located hotel with real Norwegian character.
2.4km
Free evening meals Monday through Thursday smack in the middle of Oslo