Background
His father was head of the Dessau Pädagogium and his mother was an opera singer.
His father was head of the Dessau Pädagogium and his mother was an opera singer.
After his brothers returned from Paris, they accompanied him on a trip through the Harz mountains, then on to Vienna in 1811, where he attended the Academy of Fine Arts.
All three received their first art lessons from Carl Wilhelm Kolbe and Christian Haldenwang. Friedrich also received instruction from the Court Sculptor Friedemann Hunold (1773-1840). Shortly after the Freiheitskriege (Wars of Liberation) began, he joined Theodor Körner and some of his associates, walking from Vienna to Breslau where they joined the Lützow Free Corps.
Following campaigns in the Netherlands and France, he was apparently awarded the Order of Saint Anna, third class, but it remains unclear when (or even if) he was granted a title of nobility.
He returned to Vienna in 1814 and travelled throughout Austria. At that time, his painting style underwent a major transformation, prefiguring the style of Hans von Marées.
He also spent some time in Munich, assisting Carolsfeld with a large fresco project depicting scenes from the Nibelungenlied at one of King Ludwig"s royal residences. He lived there the rest of his life and created no further works.
Several of his better-known works were lost when a fire destroyed the Glaspalast in Munich on 6 June 1931.