Heinrich Adam Explained

Heinrich Adam (1787 – 15 February 1862) was a German painter.

Life

Heinrich Adam, a brother of Albrecht Adam, was born in Nördlingen in 1787. He studied painting in Augsburg and Munich, and distinguished himself as a painter of landscapes and as an engraver. In 1811 he stayed with Albrecht at Lake Como, and painted in watercolours. He also engraved six hunting-pieces, after his brother Albrecht, at Milan, in 1813.

Subsequently, he painted landscapes and views of towns, which are executed with great accuracy.[1] His Das neue München mit den Bauten König Ludwigs I. (1839), a view in oils of the Max-Josephs-Platz, surrounded by 14 smaller pictures of new buildings in Munich, mounted together in one frame, is in the collection of the Munich Stadtmuseum.[2] A set of watercolours in a similar format is in the Metropolitan Museum in New York.[3]

He died in Munich in 1862.[1]

See also

References

Attribution:

Notes and References

  1. Bryan
  2. Web site: Das neue München mit den Bauten König Ludwigs I. (1839). Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte. 15 October 2012.
  3. Web site: Fifteen Architectural Subjects: Views of Munich. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.. 15 October 2012.