Background
Hermann Kauffmann was born in Hamburg, the son of a merchant and of the daughter of a silk trader.
Hermann Kauffmann was born in Hamburg, the son of a merchant and of the daughter of a silk trader.
From 1827 to 1833 he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich. His teacher Peter Heß was one of the leading representative of the Munich naturalists. Kauffmann then joined the Hamburg artists group in Munich, led by Andreas Borum, but soon left and studied nature.
His first teacher was the Hamburg painter Gerdt Hardorff. He returned to Hamburg in 1833. His work continued to be influenced by the Bavarian landscape.
He made further landscape studies during journeys to north and south Germany, to Norway, and in and around Hamburg.
He favored winter landscapes, such as Postwagen im Schneesturm, Schlittenbahn auf der Elbe, Fischerszene auf dem Eis. Works by Kauffmann are on display in Hamburg at the Hamburger Kunsthalle and in the museums at Darmstadt, Hannover and Leipzig, and his painting of the Great Fire of Hamburg hangs in the Hamburg town hall.
He died in Hamburg in 1889. The Hermann-Kauffmann-Straße in Hamburg-Barmbek is named for him.
Brigitte Lohkamp (1977), "Kauffmann, Hermann", Neue Deutsche Biographie (Neue Deutsche Biographie) (in German) 11, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp.
343–344. (full text online)
Emil Benezé. (1906), "Kauffmann, Hermann", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (Asian Development Bank) (in German) 51, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp.
73–75
Bärbel Hedinger: Hermann Kauffmann 1808-1899 - Bilder aus Norddeutschland.
Ausstellungskatalog, Altonaer Museum, Norddeutsches Landesmuseum, 1989.
As a member of the Hamburg art society, he is immortalized in Günther Gensler"s 1840 painting Die Mitglieder des Hamburger Künstlervereins.