Oswald Achenbach - Abend - 1854

 


Oswald Achenbach was born in Düsseldorf and from the age of twelve studied art at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie with his elder brother, Andreas (1815-1910), under Johann Wilhelm Schirmer (1807-1863). Throughout his long career Achenbach was a landscape painter, first working mainly in his homeland before study trips to Bavaria, northern Italy and Switzerland encouraged him to expand his repertoire. It was a journey to Rome and its surroundings in 1850 with fellow Düsseldorf student Arnold Böcklin (1827-1901) which was to prove most influential, resulting in works such as Morning and Evening, which focused on the Italian landscape and traditional way of life. These works herald a new interest in naturalism and the depiction of atmospheric light conditions, replacing Achenbach’s earlier more formalised compositions.


Morning (RCIN 403845) depicts peasant figures in the countryside south-east of Rome near Castel Gandolfo with views overlooking Lake Albano. The Papal palace, designed by Carlo Maderno is visible in the distance. Ariccia, another Roman hill town, is the setting for Evening, with the Church of the Assunta by Bernini depicted at the summit. Both districts were well known beauty spots, popular with visiting foreign artists including Richard Wilson (1713-1782) and Camille Corot (1796-1875).


Given their subject matter, these paintings can be dated to some time after the artist’s first trip to Rome in 1850. At that date Oswald Achenbach was relatively unknown, having only exhibited seven paintings in Germany and none in England. He first did so at an exhibition of contemporary German painting held at the German Gallery in London in May 1854. From the exhibition Prince Albert purchased this pair and The Jungfrau’(RCIN 403622) by August Becker, the brother of Ernst Becker, Librarian at Windsor and tutor to the two eldest princes. Morning and Evening were hung in the Ground Floor Corridor of the Main Wing at Osborne.

Source: Royal Collection Trust

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