Adolf des Coudres

Adolf des Coudres ( born June 2, 1862 in Karlsruhe, † September 21, 1924 in Fürstenfeldbruck ) was a German landscape painter.

With 19 years of Adolf Coudres came in 1881 at the Art Academy in his hometown and became a student of Gustav Schönleber. In 1890 he left the Academy and settled as a freelance artist in Karlsruhe. Many years spent Adolf des Coudres the summer months in Fürstenfeldbruck. In 1910 he moved from Munich, where he had lived for several years in the community Emmering in Fürstenfeldbruck and built here at the Emmeringer Straße 55 a charming villa with studios for himself and his sister Louise. In July 1914, Adolf des Coudres involved in the first Fürstenfeldbrucker art exhibition. A few years later he moved with his fellow painter Selma Plawneek, whom he married in November 1921, to Fuerstenfeldbruck in an apartment in the Schöngeisinger road 6 Adolf des Coudres died on 21 September 1924 in Fürstenfeldbruck. He and his wife Selma, who died in March 1956, have been found on the old Emmeringer Cemetery their final resting place.

Works (selection)

  • Am Weiher
  • From the Garden
  • At the height
  • A gray day
  • Early Spring
  • Moor
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