Eugen Dücker
Eugen Dücker | |
---|---|
Eugen Dücker in 1900. | |
Born |
Eugen Gustav Dücker 10 February [O.S. 29 January] 1841 Arensburg, Governorate of Livonia, Russian Empire |
Died |
6 December 1916 Düsseldorf, German Empire |
Education | St. Petersburg Academy of Arts |
Known for | painting |
Eugen Gustav Dücker (also Eugène Gustav Dücker; 10 February [O.S. 29 January] 1841 in Arensburg (now Kuressaare in Estonia) – 6 December 1916 in Düsseldorf, Germany) was a romanticist Baltic German painter.
He lived and developed almost all his career in Düsseldorf. He is associated with the Düsseldorf school of painting. A notable student of his was the Norwegian landscape painter Adelsteen Normann who studied with Dücker from 1869 to 1872.[1] Other pupils included Heinrich Hermanns, Franz Korwan, Georg Macco, Otto Modersohn, Fritz Overbeck, Edgar Meyer, Heinrich Petersen-Angeln, Oskar Hoffmann and Carl Wuttke.
Gallery
- "Landscape with a windmill" (19th century)
- "Man near sea"
- "Seashore at Tiskre" (1866)
- "Rügen landscape" (1869)
- "Herd Near a Forest" (1871)
- "Forest Opening" (1893)
- Self-portrait, by the Baltic Sea (ca. 1900)
- "Krabbenfischer am Ostseestrand"
- "Path over sand" (1900-1910)
- "Village in Northern Germany" (1910-1916)
- "A road to a village"
- "Winter Landscape"
See also
References
- ↑ Adlsteen Normann, Burlington.co.uk, accessed April 2010
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