Heinrich Funk
Image:Heinrich Funk - Landscape at Dusk in Tyrol.jpg
Heinrich Funk (1807–1877) was a German landscape painter.
Biography
Funk was born in Herford, Westphalia. He was a pupil of Johann Wilhelm Schirmer at the Düsseldorf Academy. In 1836 he settled in Frankfurt am Main, and from 1854 to 1876 was professor at the Royal School of Art in Stuttgart.{{cite NIE|wstitle=Funk, Heinrich|year=1906 |page=343}}
Works
Funk was gifted with keen observation, a fine sense of beauty of form and line, and his pictures are notable for perfect drawing, minute execution, and poetic conception, often combined with splendid light effects. As well as his paintings, he also left more than five hundred charcoal and pencil drawings of sterling quality.
Among those in public galleries at the turn of the 20th century were:
- Castle Ruin in the Gloaming (1834), National Gallery, Berlin
- Lower Inn Valley (1846), and Ruin by the Lake(1852), Städel Institute, Frankfort
- The Kaisergebirge in the Inn Valley, and Stormy Weather in the Eifel, Stuttgart Museum
Notes
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Further reading
{{more footnotes|date=May 2015}}
- {{Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie|8|202|202|Funk, Heinrich|Moritz Blanckarts|ADB:Funk, Heinrich}}
External links
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Category:German landscape painters
Category:Academic staff of State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart