Bertel Christian Budtz Müller was a pioneering Danish photographer. He operated the photographic studioBudtz Müller & Co. at Bredgade21 in Copenhagen and was appointed as court photographer in Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
Early life and education
Budtz Müller was born in Mariager, the son of teacher Rasmus Müller and Arnolde Cathrine Grundtvig. He apprenticed as a pharmacist in Aalborg and then moved to Copenhagen where he graduated as candidatus pharmaciae in 1858. He worked for a year in Randers, and was then employed by, the founder of Alfred Benzon A/S, at the Swan Pharmacy in Copenhagen in 1859.
Career
Müller and Benzon opened a shop with photography equipment at Bredgade 21 in 1862. It was converted into a photographic institute with student programmes in 1863. Benzon left the company in 1866. Müller was instead joined by the art historianPhilip Weilbach until 1871, and from then on owned Budtz Müller & Co. alone. 21 on a drawing by Knud Gamborg The firm offered a wide selection of high qualitystereoscopies and photographs in large and small formats from Copenhagen. Other images were of prominent cultural figures such as Grundtvig, Hans Christian Andersen, actors in costumes, works by Bertel Thorvaldsen and 33 stereoscopies from Greenland recorded in 1866. Other series included Danish monuments with text by Weilbach, Knippelsbro, paintings in the Royal Danish Painting Collection at Christiansborg Palace, drawings by Danish and foreign artists, paintings by Danish, Norwegian and Swedish artists, drawings and paintings by Holger Roed, weapons in the Royal Danish Arsenal, and Christiansborg Palace. A folder with 35 images by Haldor Topsøe from Fyllas expedition to Greenland was also published in 1877. Budtz Müller collaborated with Jean Christian Ferslew in introducing photolithography to the Danish market and created the first photolithographic maps for the Danish, as well as a number of reproductions of manuscripts for the Arnamagnæan Institute. Müller and Ferslew published print from 1495 of ' in 1873. Budtz Müller was in 1869 appointed as Swedish and Norwegian court photographer and in 1870 also as Danish court photographer. He wrote a number of articles about the history of photography in Den fotografiske Forenings Tidende'' in 1865. Müller's photographic studio in Bredgade was after his death for a few years continued by Ludvig Johan Offenberg under the name Budtz Müller.