Georg Heinrich Busse

{{Short description|German landscape painter and engraver}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}

File:Georg Heinrich Busse Forcona.jpg by Georg Heinrich Busse, 1839]]

Georg Heinrich Busse (17 July 1810 – 26 February 1868), a landscape painter and engraver, was born at Bennenmühlen, near Hanover. He studied drawing under Giesewell, and then proceeded, with royal assistance, to Dresden, where he learnt engraving under Stolzel, and obtained the first prize for that art in 1834. For the next ten years he was studying from nature in Italy, influenced by the work of Nicolas Poussin, Claude, and Koch, visiting Greece, however, in 1843. On his return he was appointed engraver to the Hanoverian court and library, but pursued painting also from 1847. In 1858 he went on a tour of study through Paris to Algiers and Tunis, in the course of which he painted a large number of flowers. He died in Hanover in 1868. In addition to sixty plates of etchings, the following views are by him:

  • Ruins of the Imperial Palace. 1850.
  • Monte Aventino. 1852.
  • Lago d'Agnano. 1857.
  • The Ear of Dionysius. 1862.
  • Lake Trasimene. 1863.

References

{{commons category|Georg Heinrich Busse}}

  • {{Bryan (3rd edition)|title=Busse, Georg |volume=1}}

{{Authority control (arts)}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Busse, Georg Heinrich}}

Category:1810 births

Category:1868 deaths

Category:19th-century German engravers

Category:German landscape painters

Category:Artists from Hanover

Category:Painters from Lower Saxony

Category:19th-century German painters

Category:19th-century German male artists

Category:German male painters

{{Germany-painter-stub}}

{{Germany-artist-stub}}