Emilia "Emma" Fürstenhoff, née Lindegren, was a Swedish artist, internationally known for her manufacturing and arrangements of artificial flowers of wax, which were a novelty in contemporary Europe.
Background
Emma Fürstenhoff was born in Stockholm, the daughter of the poet and royal secretary Carl Johan Lindegren (d 1815) and the noble Sofia Silfverskiöld. Both she and her mother was the subject of her father"s poems. Her father later became an alcoholic and was ruined, her parents divorced, and she moved to the capital with her mother.
Career
She displayed an early interest in flowers, and when she left her father"s property with her mother, it is said that she asked her mother to bring all the flowers with them. In Stockholm, she became the fosterchild of a mamsell Forslöf, lady in waiting to Princess Sophie Albertine of Sweden. She was described as brilliant and passionate.
She displayed her flowers at several successful art exhibitions in Stockholm.
Her work was then displayed in art exhibitions in London, Saint St. Petersburg and finally in Paris. In Saint St. Petersburg, she stayed for two years and became an artistic celebrity in the cultural salons, where she was celebrated by diplomats and aristocrats.
In an exhibition at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, she was a great success, and her flowers were considered better than the real ones. Most of her employees were female, among them the supervisor Thilda Österberg who was also from Sweden.
One of her customers was Harriet Howard.
In 1864, she was referred to as an artist fashionable in Europe for decades. During the Franco-Prussian War, she volunteered as a nurse and tendered to the wounded soldiers. By doing so, she fell sick herself, and died in Paris, during the establishment of the Paris Commune in March 1871.