Education
In 1905, he studied at the Copenhagen Technical School and later at the Kunstnernes Frie Studieskole where he was taught by Zahrtmann and Johan Rohde.
In 1905, he studied at the Copenhagen Technical School and later at the Kunstnernes Frie Studieskole where he was taught by Zahrtmann and Johan Rohde.
As a child, he moved with his family to Frejlev on the island of Lolland. He is remembered in particular for his paintings of oak trees at Skejten on Lolland, two of which can be seen at Christiansborg. In 1911, he travelled to Paris where he was inspired especially by Paul Cézanne.
On returning to Denmark, he became one of the classic modernists who around the time of the First World War focused on formal representation concentrating on form, line and colour.
His work was exhibited at Grønningen"s first exhibition in 1915. Rude was one of Denmark"s most important modernists, sometimes called Denmark"s Matisse for his use of colour in his expressive landscapes.
He was a professor at the Royal Danish Academy of Art from 1953 to 1956.
In 1919, he moved to Bornholm where he specialised in landscape painting and became a member of the Bornholm school of painters.