Vigeland Park Oslo

A single-block granite column that compacts over a hundred interlocked human figures into the park's central, monumental focal point, offering close-up study of Vigeland's figure work.

The Monolith is the central, most monumental sculpture in Vigeland Sculpture Park, the result of Gustav Vigeland's long-term project to explore human relationships in stone. Its a staggering 14-meter tall column carved from a single block of Iddefjord granite (hence the name: mono = single, lith = stone). The work is a tightly interlocked column of human figures that rises from a broad granite platform. The sculpture concentrates the same formal vocabulary you see elsewhere in the park into one vertical, compact statement and functions as the visual climax of Vigeland's layout. 

Approach close to study individual poses and faces; the figures are carved in varying scales and postures so that details shift as you walk around the base. The Monolith sits on a raised plaza that frames it against the park. It depicts 121 human figures climbing over one another. While it can look chaotic from a distance (and, let’s be honest, slightly phallic), up close it tells a clear story. The figures at the bottom are weighed down, static, and seemingly dead. As your eye moves up, the figures become lighter and more active, representing the human desire for spiritual salvation or the "resurrection." It is surrounded by a plateau featuring 36 distinct granite groups representing the cycle of relationships.


For 14 years (1929–1943), this spot looked like a construction site. A giant wooden shed was built around the stone to protect the carvers from the Norwegian winter. The public couldn't see the sculpture until the shed was demolished in 1944.

Highlights


Circle the base to examine individual figures and how poses change with viewpoint
Don't just look at the column; walk the circular steps leading up to it. The 36 granite groups around the base (like The Old Woman and the Skeleton) are often more emotional than the column itself.
Study the carved surfaces up close to see tool marks and variations in scale across the figures


Best time to go


Early Morning (07:00 – 09:00). The park is open 24 hours. If you go at 8 AM, you will have the Monolith entirely to yourself, with just a few local dog walkers. Sunset is also spectacular, but crowded.

Time needed


15–60 minutes

Getting there


Located within the Vigeland Sculpture Park. It´s the highest point in the park. Just keep walking straight from the Main Gate, past the Bridge and the Fountain, and climb the stairs.

What to do nearby


0.1km Insider pick
A concentrated, ordered presentation of a single sculptor´s entire public programme that lets you study material, form and expression across more than 200 works. It is free, open 24/7, and captures the universal human experience (joy, anger, grief) so perfectly that you don't need to know anything about art to feel it.
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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.
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See the original full-size plaster casts that became Vigeland Sculpture Park's famous bronzes and granites, and tour the artist's preserved 1943 apartment with custom-designed furniture inside his former studio building.

Hotels nearby


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