Collection
Hans Thoma
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
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Saw Mill (Falkau) - Hans Thoma
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View of Frankfurt - Hans Thoma
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Little Brook in Bernau - Hans Thoma
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The Parrot - Hans Thoma
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View of St. Blaise - Hans Thoma
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Miracle of the Clouds - Hans Thoma
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Schönenberg - Hans Thoma
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Head of a Girl I (Elisabeth La Roche) - Hans Thoma
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Portrait of a Woman II - Hans Thoma
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Springtime in the Region of the Main - Hans Thoma
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Little Black Forest Garden - Hans Thoma
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The Sower I - Hans Thoma
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Black Forest House near Happach - Hans Thoma
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The Sower I - Hans Thoma
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Black Forest Landscape - Hans Thoma
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Nymph I (Egeria) - Hans Thoma
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The Cat (Evening Tranquility) - Hans Thoma
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Gardone di Sopra I - Hans Thoma
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The Guardian of the Valley II - Hans Thoma
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Naiad (Spring Nymph) - Hans Thoma
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The Wanderer - Hans Thoma
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Memento Mori - Hans Thoma
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Artist Biography
Hans Thoma
Thoma learned to paint from a clock-face maker. He was born in Bernau, in the Black Forest, in 1839; his father was a woodworker, his mother came from a family of artisans. He started as a lithographer's apprentice in Basel, then as a clock-face painter in Furtwangen, completing neither apprenticeship before entering the Karlsruhe Academy in 1859.
A trip to Paris in 1868 with his friend Otto Scholderer exposed him to Courbet and the Barbizon painters, whose realism influenced his landscape style. He moved to Munich and spent six years there, then to Frankfurt, where he lived from 1876 to 1899. He also spent extended periods in Italy, becoming one of the "German Romans", artists who found in Renaissance observation a means of contemporary expression that fed into European Symbolism.
His landscapes of the Black Forest, with their deep greens, rounded hills and pastoral stillness, made him the best-known painter of that region. He also painted mythological and Symbolist subjects, self-portraits with allegorical figures, and genre scenes of German rural life. He married his student Cella Berteneder, who became known as a painter of flowers and still lifes.
In 1899 he was appointed director of the Kunsthalle Karlsruhe, a position he held until 1919. After his death in 1924, his work was appropriated by nationalist and Nazi ideology, and several paintings were looted from Jewish collectors during the Third Reich. The association has complicated his posthumous reputation. He remains little known outside Germany, a painter whose Black Forest landscapes speak to regional identity with an honesty that the political appropriation could not quite destroy.
A trip to Paris in 1868 with his friend Otto Scholderer exposed him to Courbet and the Barbizon painters, whose realism influenced his landscape style. He moved to Munich and spent six years there, then to Frankfurt, where he lived from 1876 to 1899. He also spent extended periods in Italy, becoming one of the "German Romans", artists who found in Renaissance observation a means of contemporary expression that fed into European Symbolism.
His landscapes of the Black Forest, with their deep greens, rounded hills and pastoral stillness, made him the best-known painter of that region. He also painted mythological and Symbolist subjects, self-portraits with allegorical figures, and genre scenes of German rural life. He married his student Cella Berteneder, who became known as a painter of flowers and still lifes.
In 1899 he was appointed director of the Kunsthalle Karlsruhe, a position he held until 1919. After his death in 1924, his work was appropriated by nationalist and Nazi ideology, and several paintings were looted from Jewish collectors during the Third Reich. The association has complicated his posthumous reputation. He remains little known outside Germany, a painter whose Black Forest landscapes speak to regional identity with an honesty that the political appropriation could not quite destroy.
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