Friedrich Eduard Eichens (27 May 1804, Berlin - 5 May 1877, Berlin) was a German engraver.
4-518: He was born in Berlin. He studied engraving first under Ludwig Buchhorn at the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin, and then went to Paris in 1827, with a grant from the government, where he received instruction from François Forster , then to Parma where he studied for three years under Paolo Toschi . He subsequently visited Florence, Rome, Naples, Venice, and Milan. On his return in 1833 he became
8-724: A drawing master in the Prussian academy. He died in Berlin in 1877. Eichens engraved some of Kaulbach 's frescoes in the Berlin Museum , and also his Shakespeare Gallery. He also did numerous portraits of contemporary celebrities after photographs. Among his prints are the following: His brother Philipp Hermann Eichens was a noted lithographer. Attribution: Ludwig Buchhorn Karl Ludwig Bernhard Christian Buchhorn (18 April 1770, in Halberstadt – 13 November 1856, in Berlin )
12-764: The Academy. He took over as the Kakademie Ordinary Member in 1811, where he served three years later as a lecturer in drawing and engraving. In the same year, Buchhorn founded with some colleagues the Berlinische Artists' Association. After the death of his teacher Daniel Berger , Buchhorn was entrusted in 1824 with the leadership of the Academic engraving school. While teaching, he had many disciples, among them were Friedrich Eduard Eichens , Rudolf Hertzberg , Hermann Kramer Edward Almond , Adolf Schrödter . At
16-457: Was a German painter and engraver. Between 1790 and 1793, Buchhorn was at the Prussian Academy of Arts . In addition to aquatint and lithography , Buchhorn adopted from his teachers a Crayon style. In 1797, he got a job as a draftsman and engraver in Dessau , where he worked until 1803. He then worked for a time as a freelance artist. In 1806, Buchhorn settled in Berlin and worked again with
#693306