Johann Heinrich Bleuler Explained

Johann Heinrich Bleuler, the Elder (31 December 1758 – 25 January 1823) was a Swiss artist who worked with porcelain, landscape sketches and gouache. He was also an art teacher and a publisher of engravings.

Life

He was born in Zollikon and initially trained as a porcelain painter at the near Zürich. At the beginning of the 1780s, he settled in Feuerthalen and established a dynasty of artists that became known as the "Bleulerische Malschule". Between 1799 and 1804, he worked at Laufen Castle near Schaffhausen, then returned home.

He catered to the popular tastes of the time; often in the style of Ludwig Hess, who had died prematurely. Much of his art involved gouache landscapes and panoramic views of Swiss cities.[1] His watercolors are in the collection of the ETH Zürich. During his final years, he mostly painted flowers.

Bleuler died in 1823 in Feuerthalen.

The Bleulerische Malschule

He had four children. His eldest son, Johann Heinrich Bleuler, the Younger (1787–1857) specialized in painting vedute. His second son, Johann Ludwig, was a landscape painter and art publisher.[2]

He also took two of his godchildren into his home when their parents died; Johann Heinrich Uster (1774–1866), who married Bleuler's daughter Karoline, and Johann Heinrich Wirz (1785–1866). Later, he adopted Anna Bose (1783–1851), who married Wirz and became a gouache painter.[3] Eventually, his family and descendants included twenty-five artists.

Sources

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Notes and References

  1. Gustav Lindtke: Zu einem alten Landschaftspanorama. In: . 1960, S. 60–65 (mit Abbildung); 100 × 380 cm, Öl auf Leinwand, seit 1921 im St.-Annen-Museum Lübeck.
  2. vgl. Thieme-Becker, Vol.4, pg.115 (after his father)
  3. Carl Seidel: Die Maler-Familie Bleuler in Feuerthalen. In: Berliner Kunst-Blatt. Heft 1, 1828,, S. 148–153.