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Theodore Kaufman (18 December 1814 Uelzen, Germany - 1896 New York City) was an artist who worked mostly in the United States.

Biography[]

He served for several years as a mercantile apprentice. He studied painting in Düsseldorf with Peter von Cornelius, in Munich with Wilhelm von Kaulbach,[1] and also in Hamburg and Dresden. He took part in the revolution at Dresden in 1848, and came to this country in 1850. He settled in New York City, where he painted portraits and taught. One of his students was editorial artist Thomas Nast. He was not successful as a school director or painter in New York, and became an itinerant photographer and portrait painter.[1]

During the American Civil War, he is reported to have fought in the Union Army and to have been a correspondent-artist. St. Louis, Missouri, city directories list him as an artist in 1864 and 1865. After the Civil War, he resided in Boston and Washington, D.C. Louis Prang made color lithographs of some of Kaufmann's more popular pieces.[1] He is noted for his portraits and military and historical paintings. He died in New York City.[1]

Works[]

  • “Gen. Sherman near the Watchfire”
  • “On to Liberty”
  • “A Pacific Railway Train attacked by Indians”
  • “Slaves seeking Shelter under the Flag of the Union”
  • “Admiral Farragut entering Harbor through Torpedoes”
  • “Farragut in the Rigging”
  • “Westward the Star of Empire” (c. 1880)
  • “Die Entstehung der Gottesidee” (“The development of the idea of God”; a series of eight etchings which, along with explanatory text, are in the Library of Congress)[1]

References[]

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Carl Wittke (1952). Refugees of Revolution: The German Forty-Eighters in America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 321-322. http://www.archive.org/details/refugeesofrevolu008276mbp. 
  • Wikisource-logo "Kaufman, Theodore". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1892. 
  • Biography at University of Missouri - St. Louis website
  • Biographical data at Smithsonian American Art Museum website

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