Sophus Jacobsen is best known for his haunting paintings which incorporate aspects of both Nordic and German Romanticism. Though born in Norway, Jacobsen is considered a member of the Düsseldorf school, as the artist relocated to Düsseldorf at age 20 in order to train with his fellow Norwegian Hans Fredrik Gude, and would remain there for the rest of his life. Much of Jacobsen's work strongly recalls the moody seascapes of Johan Christian Dahl and the elegiac landscapes of Caspar David Friedrich.