Carl Rungius biography
|
Landscape Sketch, Oil on Canvas |
Profession: Painter and Sculptor
Born: August 18, 1869, Berlin, Germany
Died: October 21, 1959, New York, New York
Carl Rungius studied at the Berlin Art Academy between 1888 and 1890. While in hometown, he frequently sketched animals at the Berlin Zoo. His dedication to painting animals with anatomical accuracy coupled with his determination to learn and paint each animal's mannerisms and habitat made Rungius a well-respected wildlife artist. Rungius first visited the United States in 1894, and traveled to Cora, Wyoming, to hunt and sketch. Rungius decided to remain in the United States spending the next decade of summers in Wyoming and the remainder of the year in his New York studio. During this time, he painted and hunted western big game animals, including moose, pronghorn, and bighorn sheep in the Rocky Mountains, and he completed these paintings during the long New York winters.
Rungius' reputation as a premier wildlife artist was enhanced considerably by an expedition to the Yukon Territory in 1905. The artwork and social connections that resulted from that trip launched Rungius into the center of America's conservation movement, promoted by such famous American sportsmen as President Theodore Roosevelt. In 1910 he accepted an offer to visit the Canadian Rockies. The opportunities to hunt, explore, and paint the region were so appealing that in 1921 he built a summer studio called "The Paintbox" in Banff, where he worked from April to October of each year until his death in 1959.
Rungius' ability to capture the heart-stopping chance encounter between man and animal sets him apart from many of his talented colleagues. Equally accomplished as a painter of wildlife and landscapes, Rungius quickly developed an enthusiastic following among fellow artists and patrons. The National Museum of Wildlife Art maintains the largest public collection of Rungius' work in the United States.
All Featured Artwork
American Black Bear, 1929 - Oil on Canvas
Better than Bacon, c. 1900 - Oil on Canvas
Bow Valley, c. 1920 - Oil on Canvas
Buck and Doe in the Woods, c. 1930s - Oil on Canvas
Bull Elk, c. 1940 - Watercolor on Paper
Bull Elk, Moose, Two Bighorns, 1940 - Watercolor on Paper. Various sizes
Caribou in the Mountains, Before 1925 - Oil on Canvas
Caribou, North of Banff, c. 1940 - Oil on Canvas en Grisaille
Harlow Triptych: Three Old Gentlemen, Morning Mist, and Dall Sheep, c. 1930s - Oil on Canvas
In His Prime, c. 1940 - Oil on Canvas
In the Clouds, c. 1940 - Oil on Canvas
Lake O'Hara, c. 1935 - Oil on Canvas
Landscape Sketch, c. 1940 - Oil on Canvas
Montague Island Bear, c. 1905 - Oil on Canvas en Grisaille
Moose, c. 1940 - Watercolor on Paper
Moose on the Head of Ram River, c. 1940s - Oil on Canvas
Morning Mist, c. 1930 - Oil on Canvas
Northern King, 1926 - Oil on Canvas
Quantrell Moose, c. 1925 - Oil on Canvas
Red Fox, 1933 - Oil on Canvas
Survival of the Fittest, c.1901-1904 - Oil on Canvas
The Cragmaster, 1912 - Oil on Canvas
The Days of Bison Millions (Looking West Toward the Wyoming Range), 1917 - Oil on Canvas
The Humpback, c. 1945 - Oil on Canvas
Three Old Gentlemen, c. 1940 - Oil on Canvas
Two Bighorns, c. 1940 - Watercolor on Paper
Wind River Bugler, 1923 - Oil on Canvas
Wyoming Sage, 1902 - Oil on Canvas
Artist Biography Index