Who is Frank Duveneck?
Frank Duvenec, American painter, art teacher and Etcher, is recognized as an influential realist of the 19th century. His most famous portraits include "The Cobble's Apprentice", "a boy's portrait and a whistling boy". His oil paintings often contained expressive brush strokes; Live, detailed head or figure; And dark, often referred to as chicks, background. He studied in Munich, Germany at the Royal Academy in 1870-73, where he produced many of his famous portraits. He was very successful in Bravura Brush, which was taught at the Munich Art Academy he visited.
In 1874 he returned to Cincinnati and taught art at the Ohio Mechanics Institute. His students were Robert Frederick Blum Ajohn H. Twachtman. During this period, Frank Duvenec also attracted great attention and respect through the exhibition of his work in Boston, Massachusetts in 1875. Many of his students, also the German-AmericanNY, traveled with Frank Duvenec to study. The group, which became known as The Duvenec Boys, included Twachtman, Otto Henry Bacher, Joseph Decamp and Theodore Wendel. Other pupils of the Duvenec included W. M, Chase, George Edward Hopkins, John Alexander White, Julius Rolshoven, Harper Pennington and Charles Abel Corwin.
During his time in Munich, Duvenec also traveled to Bavaria during the summer, accompanied by friends and students. There artists painted outside and the work of Duveneck's trips included landscape. In 1879 he moved to Florence in Italy, where he met his wife Elizabeth Booth, Boston, Massachusetts, a native who lived in Florence. In Italy, his style has changed from the dark portraits of young boys or older men to brighter portraits of young girls who include color and light. He also began to mix his brush blows and adjust his pieces.In one place inFlorence began to create detailed etching with James McNeil Whistler. Duvenec's etching of Venice, including "Riva", "No. 2", "Grand Canal" and "Bridge with Sigh", are described as courageous. The tragedy, however, intervened in 1889, when Duvenec's young woman died. He then returned to Cincinnati, where he became a famous teacher at Cincinnati Fine Arts Academy.
In the 90s of the 20th century, Frank Duvenec created impressionist type images, including one called "Little girl in a red dress". His style at this stage returned to the more distinctive of the past, even described as longing, innocent and vulnerable. In 1915, three years before Frank Duvenec died, he received a second medal for his work he exhibited in San Francisco on Panama-Pacific Expo.