The content on this page is aggregated and is not affiliated with the artist.
Adolf von Becker (14 August 1831 – 23 August 1909); Finnish genre painter and art professor of German descent. He was one of the first Finnish artists to study in Paris.
Becker was born in Helsinki, where he began his artistic studies at the newly founded Finnish Art Society Drawing School; he also studied law. In 1853, he completed his law degree and became a trainee at the Court of Appeals in Turku. While there, he continued to make drawing expeditions into the countryside and made the acquaintance of Robert Wilhelm Ekman, who encouraged him to study at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. He took Ekman's advice and graduated there in 1856.
...Meanwhile, in 1872, he had started his own private drawing school, probably to make nude models available to his students. He was known as a very strict teacher, so this may have also been a way to gain more control over the curriculum. Studies there were, however, interrupted by his frequent travels. Among his best-known students were Helene Schjerfbeck, Elin Danielson-Gambogi, Helena Westermarck and Akseli Gallen-Kallela.
As the 19th-Century drew to a close, he came under increasing criticism from the younger generation of artists for being too conservative. This came to a head at the Exposition Universelle in 1889, when the older generation, represented by Becker, Walter Runeberg and Berndt Lindholm, came into open confrontation with a younger faction led by Ville Vallgren and Albert Edelfelt. Soon after, disagreements developed between him and the Finnish Art Society and he began to exhibit independently.
He retired from the University in 1892 and returned to Paris. As he grew older, he found the winters there a bit too cold, so he moved to Nice in 1904. He died while vacationing in Vevey, Switzerland, aged 78.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_von_Becker) undefined