We managed to avoid any trolls on our hour's bus tour out of Bergen to visit that home... discovering a lovely Nordic home, favoring the Victorian age in which it was built. It is being refurbished, so unfortunately we were not able to view its interior.
... It was the most interesting part of the home to me...
One walks to the studio down a fair slope, some parts of which offered split-rail hand holds.
The far more more polished piece of the tour's program was a concert in the truly effective Troldsale... the concert venue built into the hill along which we'd walked down to the studio where the music we were going to hear was composed. The stage was backed by a wall of glass open to the view. A grand piano waited. The pianist appeared from the steps below to play. The Peer Gynt Suite at home in the Hall of the Mountain King!
We lingered, admiring the venue's ambience before emerging from such a brilliantly spacial underground experience, into a yet more brilliantly sunny day. Ordering lattes at the cafe we sat to enjoy the sun, while realizing that the performer had done the same, so we chatted, to learn that he too was only there for the first time that day, so he accepted our invitation to join while we explored to find the vault where the couple rested... another small walk along the rocky shoreline of the lake, finding the simple slab closing, with little marking its reason for sheltering so much significance so insignificantly in that cliff... a profound closure to the day.
This drawing of Madame Grieg, Nina,which I found in the museum, is so happily impish that I want to suppose she was a ready anodyne to any negative troll energy in their life!

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