Harald Jerichau
Harald Adolf Nikolaj Jerichau (18 August 1851, Copenhagen – 6 March 1878, Rome)[1] was a Danish landscape painter.
Biography
His father was the sculptor, Jens Adolf Jerichau, and his mother was the painter, Elisabeth Jerichau-Baumann. His brother, Holger (1861–1900), also became a painter. He received his first formal drawing lessons from the architect, C.V. Nielsen, then studied perspective at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in 1868. Later, he received lessons from F.C. Lund and Eiler Rasmussen Eilersen.[2] This was followed by a trip to Italy with his mother.
In Rome, he was a pupil of Jean-Achille Benouville who, at that time, was director of the French Academy. After six months there, he made a study trip to Turkey and Greece, spent some time in Paris visited Switzerland and, in 1874, returned to Istanbul with his mother.[2] During this time, he had begun to exhibit in Copenhagen.
Since he was just a boy, he had been engaged to his cousin, Maria Kutzner. In 1875, she came to Istanbul and they were married. Their first child died at the age of three months. Believing the climate in Turkey to be unfavorable, they moved to Naples. A year later, Maria became violently ill and died in November, 1876. He considered suicide but slowly regained his will to live. In 1878, just as he was beginning to restart his career, he died from a combination of typhus and "Italian ague" (malaria).[2] He was buried in Rome at the Cimitero Acattolico.
In 1879, a small exhibition of his works was held in Copenhagen, featuring scenes painted in Turkey that had been commissioned by the brewer, J.C. Jacobsen.
References
- ↑ Nordisk Familjiebok @ Projekt Runeberg.
- 1 2 3 Biographical notes @ Kunstindeks Danmark.
Further reading
- Elisabeth Jerichau-Baumann, Til Erindring Om Harald Jerichau (A Remembrance), reprint by BiblioBazaar, 2014 ISBN 1-294-72583-1
External links
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