Education
He attended drawing classes at the Bern gymnasium under Joseph Volmar.
He attended drawing classes at the Bern gymnasium under Joseph Volmar.
He is mostly known on account of his journals, in which he presents an account of and an interesting commentary on life in the mid-19th century along the Mississippi and Missouri. Born in 1818 in Langnau im Emmental to Johannes Kurz (who moved to Langnau from Reutlingen, Germany in 1806) and Maria Stooss. In 1838 he travelled to Paris to further his studies.
Thereupon he met Alexander von Humboldt and Karl Bodmer.
Upon returning to Bern (1842) he became head of painting class at the Fellenberg Institute in Hofwil. Again he left Bern (and the Old Continent) in 1846 setting sails for America.
The venture along the banks of Mississippi and Missouri was noted and reviewed in his journals. The time spent in the bustling frontier communities proved to be both fruitful and dangeroushe tried his luck in mining and horse trade (with no successes).
Eventually, after four years of struggle to pay board and lodging he met Alexander Culbertson in Council Bluffs, in June 1851 and embarked the steamer Saint Ange to Fort Fort Berthold work for the American Fur Company.
While Kurz worked as a clerk, he also sketched scenes in the area, despite being told that the Mandan and Hidatsa people considered painting and drawing would bring ill luck. During the summer, cholera broke out among the Indians, and nearly everyone except Kurz became illinois Blame for the sickness began to focus upon the artist, so he fled to Fort Union on August 18, 1851.
In Fort Union, Kurz had better opportunities of indulging in his passion.
Bourgeois or manager of the fort, Edwin Thompson Denig commissioned the young Swiss to paint and sketch various persons and places. Many his sketches of Fort Union"s interior helped with that fort"s partial reconstruction in 1989.
Kurz returned to Bern in 1852 and taught painting, first in the local gymnasium and later, at the closure of his life, at an Art School he established. One of his pupils was Fritz Schenk who later emigrated to the United States in 1870 and became agent for the Sioux Indian Reservation at Fort Randall, South Dakot Upon his death on October 16, 1871, Rudolf Friedrich Kurz left a large number of sketches, paintings (some of which were burned by his family due to nudity) and texts as well as a brief dictionary of Native American dialects.