Franz Horny

Franz Theobald Horny (23 November 1798, Weimar - 23 June 1824, Olevano Romano) was a German painter in the Romantic style.

Franz Horny. Portrait by Carl Christian Vogel von Vogelstein (1820)
View of Olevano (1822)

Life

He attended the Weimar Princely Free Drawing School, where he studied under Johann Heinrich Meyer, Goethe's advisor on artistic matters.[1] His father, Konrad Horny , was also a teacher there. A decisive turn in his career came when he met the art historian, collector and patron Carl Friedrich von Rumohr, who took him along on a trip to Rome[1] and helped to place him as a student in the workshop of Joseph Anton Koch. He remained there until 1817, torn between his German-Romantic upbringing on one hand and the influences of the Nazarene movement on the other. He accompanied Rumohr on trips to Olevano and Frascati. On one of these trips, he met Peter von Cornelius who used his connections to obtain work for Horny painting frescoes at the "Casino Massimo", owned by the Marquis Carlo Massimo.[1]

Upon his return to Germany, he worked primarily as a landscape painter. Shortly thereafter, he was diagnosed with tuberculosis. As his illness worsened, he went back to Italy in hopes that the climate would be more amenable, and settled in Olevano in 1822.[1] His disease worsened, however and, after much suffering, he died there. He was buried in the local cemetery.

In 1998/99, to celebrate Horny's 200th birthday, the Hamburger Kunsthalle, in cooperation with the Kunstsammlungen zu Weimar, presented "Ein Romantiker im Lichte Italiens", the first full exhibition devoted to Horny's work.[2]

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gollark: (this is now up on the forums).
gollark: ```Unfortunately, it is unavailable, possibly forever, because (according to an email):Thank you for your request to access the Dragon Cave API from host dc.osmarks.tk. At this time, your request could not be granted, for the following reason: You have, through your own admission on the forums, done the exact thing that got EATW banned from the API.This may be a non-permanent issue; feel free to re-submit your request after correcting any issue(s) listed above.Thanks, T.J. Land presumably due to this my server and computer (yes, I should use a VPS, whatever) can no longer access DC. Whether this is sickness checking, scraping, or using EATW's approximation for optimal view count I know not, but oh well. Due to going against the unwritten rules of DC (yes, this is why I was complaining about ridiculous T&C issues) this hatchery is now nonfunctional. Service may be restored if I actually get some notification about what exactly the problem is and undoing it will not make the whole thing pointless. The text at the bottom is quite funny, though.```
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gollark: They effectively give helping permission by submitting it to a hatchery, but that's irrelevant.

References

  1. Walther Scheidig (1972), "Horny, Franz", Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) (in German), 9, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 640–641; (full text online)
  2. Franz Horny Archived 2016-03-13 at the Wayback Machine @ Hamburger Kunsthalle.

Further reading

  • Jens Christian Jensen: Aquarelle und Zeichnungen der deutschen Romantik. DuMont Buchverlag, Köln 1992, pg.167, ISBN 3-7701-0976-7.
  • Walter Scheidig: Franz Horny, Berlin, Henschelverlag, 1954.
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