Agnes Nyblin née Janson (25 January 1869 – 20 August 1945) was a Norwegian photographer.
The growth was made possible by a change in the law in 1866 which allowed women to have a business.
The Encyclopedia of nineteenth-century photography is disparaging about the new group of female photographers but it identifies seven women whose work is of note including Marie Høeg in Horten, Louise Abel in Christiania, Louise Wold in Holmestrand, Augusta Solberg in Lillehammer and Nyblin and Hulda Marie Bentzen in Bergen.
[3] The photograph shown was taken at a music festival in 1898 and it records a meeting of many of Denmark's leading composers and musicians.
The business continued in the care of her younger brother, Helmich Janson, until four years after her death which was in 1945.