Rudolf Koller (1828 – 1905) was a Swiss painter. He is associated with a realist and classicist style, and also with the essentially romantic Düsseldorf school of painting. Koller's style is similar to that of the realist painters Gustave Courbet and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot. Considered Switzerland's finest animal painter, Koller is rated alongside George Stubbs, Rosa Bonheur and Théodore Géricault. While his reputation was based on his paintings of animals, he was a sensitive and innovative artist whose well-composed works in the "plein air" tradition, including Swiss mountain landscapes, are just as finely executed.
He has been described as "the painter of the Swiss national animal", because of his paintings of cows in Swiss landscapes. He is considered to be one of the most important Swiss painters of the 19th century.
From 1840 to 1843 he studied at the cantonal industrial school in Zürich. He got his first artistic tuition from his uncle, who was a landscape painter. The young Koller decided to specialise as a painter in depicting horses.
After he left the Industrial School in Zurich, in October 1843, Koller began studying under the art teacher Jacques Schweizer, the portrait painter Johann Rudolf Obrist, and the landscape painter Johann Jakob Ulrich, and took private painting classes with them. Ulrich, who was a successful painter of landscapes and animals, influenced him further in his choice of themes during his artistic career.
In 1845 he went to Munich where he worked with a group of artists called "the Schweizer", led by the Swiss landscapist Johann Gottfried Steffan.
In 1845 horse trials were begun at the stud farm of the King of Württemberg, near Stuttgart, and Koller was hired to produce pictures of horses and dogs there. In 1846–47, he studied figure drawing at the Fine Arts Academy of Düsseldorf. At the Academy Koller formed friendships with the future Swiss symbolist painter Arnold Böcklin and the German classicist Anselm Feuerbach.
Later Koller moved to Paris. In 1847, while living in Paris, he shared a studio with Arnold Böcklin. At the Louvre he copied Netherlandish artworks of the 17th century and familiarized himself with the works of contemporary animal painters such as Rosa Bonheur and Constant Troyon.
From 1849 to 1850 Koller painted at Hasliberg, a village near Interlaken. Later he travelled to Munich, where he became acquainted with the landscape and animal painters Johann Gottfried Steffan and Friedrich Voltz. At a horse farm in Upper Bavaria he produced studies of horses and travelled to the Zugspitze and Tirol to study mountain scenery.
From April 1851 he again lived in Zürich, where he became friends with the Swiss painters Robert Zünd and Ernst Stückelberg. Koller opened a studio in Zürich, as a result of which he obtained numerous commissions for paintings of animals. In 1852–53, in association with Zünd, he painted several landscape studies.
In 1857 he produced the notable painting Die Kuh im Krautgarten (Cow in the Vegetable Garden). He became friends with the Swiss Bildungsroman novelist Gottfried Keller, the cultural historian Jacob Burckhardt and the novelist and playwright Friedrich Theodor Vischer. During 1858, Koller travelled to the Swiss Canton of Glarus; his work Richisau dates from this trip.[13]
In 1862 Koller bought a chalet on the eastern shore of Lake Zürich, where he was to live for the rest of his life. There he kept various animals, mainly to study them as painting subjects. He often painted rustic farm scenes, landscapes and scenes that depicted animals. He loved animals and treated them in his pictures as representing part of the forces of unspoiled nature. In 1868–69 his travels took him to Florence, Rome and Naples.
After he returned, he took in art students at his studio. His painting Hay Harvest in Threatening Weather of 1854 is a good example of his harmonious composition and integrity of expression.
In 1870 Koller began to suffer from a vision impairment that interfered with his work Nevertheless, in 1873, still at the height of his artistic powers, he secured an assignment from the Swiss Northeastern Railway, to produce a gift for the industrial and railway pioneer Alfred Escher on the occasion of his retirement. Koller chose to allude to the St. Gotthard tunnel project, which Escher had championed, and eventually combined several studies to paint the Gotthardpost, or The Gotthard Mail Coach, showing one of the horse-drawn mail coaches, rendered obsolete by the opening of the tunnel. The painting is recognized as one of the best ever done by a Swiss painter. Koller painted a replica in 1874 for the Credit Suisse bank in Zurich. In 1900 Koller travelled for the last time to Italy, where he met with his friend Böcklin near Florence.
© 2020. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Rudolf Koller or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only
Mr. Rudolf Koller |
Koller's portrait of the young Arnold Böcklin 1847 |
Frightened Horses Before a Storm 1849 |
Hay Harvest in Threatening Weather 1854 |
The Artist and his Model 1854 |
Bertha Schlatter 1855 |
Wagon in Ravine 1855 |
A forest meadow with alpine hut 1856 |
Leaving the Mountains 1856–57 |
Sustenpass Glacier 1856–57 |
Cow in Vegetable Garden 1857 |
Richisau 1858 |
Midday Rest 1860 |
Running Calf 1860 |
Sheep in the stable 1861 |
Lunch in the fields 1867-68 |
Study of a Cow's Head 1869 |
Farmyard 1870 |
Bellowing Cow 1871 |
Boy on White Horse 1872 |
Gotthardpost 1873 |
Kühe mit Reiter am Wasser beim Zürichhorn 1877 |
Into the Mountains 1881 |
Sleigh ride 1892 |
Exhibition poster 1898 |
St. Remigius Church 1898 |
Three fauns with a cow and a calf 1900 |
Biche et Mouche n.d. |
Boy with goat in landscape n.d. |
Cows in the pasture n.d. |
Cows with shepherdess at the lake n.d. |
Pferdetrnke n.d. |
Rider and Farmer's Wife at the Lake n.d. |
Standing white horse n.d. |
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