Gotthardt Kuehl | |
Birth Date: | 28 November 1850 |
Birth Place: | Lübeck, German Confederation |
Death Place: | Dresden, German Empire |
Nationality: | German |
Field: | Painting |
Training: | Dresden Academy of Fine Arts Academy of Fine Arts, Munich |
Movement: | Impressionism |
Gotthardt Kuehl (28 November 1850 – 9 January 1915) was a German painter and a representative of early German Impressionism. He gained wide international recognition during his lifetime.
His father, Simon Kühl, was the Sexton and organist at . He studied at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts (1867) and the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, (1870). From 1878 to 1889, he lived in Paris. He also made study trips to Italy and the Netherlands. In 1888, he married Henriette Simonson-Castelli (1860–1921), daughter of the portrait painter, .
At the turn of the century, he and Carl Bantzer, a friend from Paris, were the driving forces behind the establishment of the (artists' association). Together, they were also influential in introducing Impressionism there. In 1895, he was named a Professor at the Academy. The following year, he was awarded a gold medal at the Große Berliner Kunstausstellung. In 1902, he was one of the founding members of another artists' association, "". He also served as one of the first board members of the Deutschen Künstlerbundes. In 1913, he was honored with the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art.
From 1906 until his death, he lived in a villa near the Wasaplatz. He was cremated and placed in the . A street has been named for him in Dresden's district. in Lübeck a school, originally on the site of his parents' house, was named after him in 1934.
The Behnhaus museum in Lübeck has a collection of paintings by Kuehl, illustrating almost all his developmental phases, and many of the artworks are directly related to the city of Lübeck. The Munich City Museum houses 15 drawings by Kuehl, from the collection of Joseph Maximilian von Maillinger.
Other works of art by Kuehl can be found, among other places, at: