Gustav Koken

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Heathland with Shepherd

Gustav Heinrich Julius Koken (8 August 1850, Hanover - 6 July 1910, Hanover) was a German painter and etcher. He was the nephew of Edmund Koken, a landscape painter, and the father of Änne Koken, a graphic designer.[1]

A Shady Spot

He was initially given art lessons by his uncle Edmund. After leaving Hanover for a time, to tour Germany, he enrolled at the Grand-Ducal Saxon Art School, Weimar in 1872. His primary instructor there was Theodor Hagen.[1] In addition to painting, he studied etching and had his own studio in Weimar until 1878.

That year, he returned to Hanover, where he became a member of the Hannoverscher Künstlerverein [de]. Immediately after, he began a campaign for the creation of new galleries and a reorganization of the exhibition system. He was also involved in establishing and art museum at the Leibniz House [de].[1]

In order to gain further inspiration, he travelled frequently; visiting Emsland, the Teutoburg Forest, the Lüneburg Heath and the Südheide (now a nature park). During this time, he was offered a professorship at the Kunstakademie Königsberg, but he declined because he wanted to remain in his homeland. Instead, he founded a private painting school in Hanover.

He was a good friend of the opera singer, Georg Nollet [de], who would often perform in his home. Together with the painters Hermann Schaper, Oscar Wichtendahl [de] and Ernst Pasqual Jordan, he decorated the singer's home, known as the "Salle Nollet".[2]

One month before his sixtieth birthday, he died suddenly from a heart attack. Following his death, a special exhibition was held.[3] In 2004, the Historisches Museum Hannover presented a retrospective of works by every member of the Koken family.[4]

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Further reading

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