Franz Wilhelm Johann Bunke (3 December 1857, Schwaan - 6 July 1939, Weimar) was a German landscape painter.
Life
He was the son of a mill builder. In 1871, he began drawing lessons with Paul Tischbein in Rostock and attended a trade school after Tischbein's death.[1]
Beginning in 1892, he spent the summers in his home town of Schwaan and founded an art colony there. Every year, some of his students would accompany him and engage in plein-air painting. Occasionally, his fellow artists from the Academy would join him.[1]
Prior to 1890, his works showed heavy influence from the Dutch Masters. His later works are notable for an almost reverential approach to depicting nature in detail. Among his favorite subjects were Schwaan, the surrounding villages and scenes along the Warnow River. From 1903 to 1914, he exhibited regularly at the Glaspalast (Munich).[1]
Honors
1880: Gold Medal for Fine Arts of the Karl-Alexander Foundation of Weimar.
1910: Appointed a Professor in 1910, by authority of Grand Duke Wilhelm Ernst.
Lisa Jürß: Bunke, Franz Wilhelm Johann. In: Biographisches Lexikon für Mecklenburg. Vol. 5. Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 2009. ISBN978-379-50374-6-8. S. 90-93
Heiko Brunner; Lisa Jürß: Franz Bunke: eine Werkübersicht. Edition Fischerhuder Kunstbuch 2007. ISBN978-3-88132-076-4
Lisa Jürß: Künstlerkolonie Schwaan. Galerie in der Alten Wassermühle. Werkkatalog. Edition Fischerhuder Kunstbuch 2002. ISBN3-88132-295-7
Friedrich von Boetticher: Malerwerke des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Hofheim am Taunus, o.J.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Franz Bunke.