Andreas Achenbach (29 September 1815 – 1 April 1910) was a German landscape and seascape painter in the Romantic style. He is considered to be one of the founders of the Düsseldorf School.[citation needed] His brother, Oswald, was also a well known landscape painter. Together, based on their initials, they were known as the "Alpha and Omega" of landscape painters.[1][2]
Biography
His father, Hermann,(1783–1849) was a merchant by trade, but worked at a number of professions. In 1816, he became the manager of a metal factory in Mannheim. Two years later, they moved to St.Petersburg, where his father wanted to set up a factory with money that his mother had received as an inheritance. It was here that Andreas took his first drawing lessons. The project failed and they returned to Rhine Province in 1823. Soon, his father had established a brewery in Düsseldorf, with an inn that was frequented by the local art community.[3][4]
He then took a study trip to the Netherlands and had his first real success in 1836, at an exhibition in Cologne, where one of his paintings was purchased by the Governor of Rhine Province, Prince Frederick. After a tour of Bavaria and Tyrolia, he settled in Frankfurt and, with the assistance of Alfred Rethel, opened a studio at the Städelsche Kunstinstitut. He travelled continuously, however, often in the company of his brother, throughout Scandinavia and Italy. They both became regular visitors to Ostend. He returned home on family business in 1846.
That year, he took over the brewery and inn. His father, although technically retired, became a free-lance accountant.[6] In 1848, he married Marie Louise Hubertine Catharine Lichtschlag (1827–1889), known as Luise.[7][8] They had five children. Their second child, Maximilian, became an opera singer, known under the name Max Alvary.
When he died, he was a given a grand viewing and ceremony at the Malkasten house. He was buried in a magnificent tomb with a sculpture by Karl Janssen. There is a street, the "Achenbachweg" named after him in Holsterhausen [de].[10]
^Rudolf Theilmann: Die Schülerlisten der Landschafterklassen von Schirmer bis Dücker. In: Wend von Kalnein: Die Düsseldorfer Malerschule. Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz 1979, ISBN3-8053-0409-9, pg.144
^Detlef Lorenz: Reklamekunst um 1900. Künstlerlexikon für Sammelbilder. Reimer, 2000.
^Erwin Dickhoff: Familien, Bürger und Personen im Spiegel Essener Straßennamen. Stadt Essen, Essen 1968, pg.9.
Further reading
Bettina Baumgärtel, Wolfgang Peiffer, Matthias Winzen (each publishers): Andreas Achenbach. Revolutionär und Malerfürst. Athena-Verlag, Oberhausen 2016, ISBN978-3-89896-632-0.
Wolfgang Peiffer: Andreas Achenbach – Das druckgraphische Werk. Athena-Verlag, Oberhausen 2014, ISBN978-3-89896-570-5.
Wolfgang Peiffer: Andreas Achenbach – Italienreise. Baden-Baden 2009, ISBN978-3-937978-58-1.
Martina Sitt (Ed.): Andreas und Oswald Achenbach. "Das A und O der Landschaft". Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf exhibition catalog, Hamburg and Linz 1997/98. Wienand, Cologne 1997, ISBN3-87909-549-3.