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・ Carl Siegemund Schönebeck
・ Carl Siegfried Bonnevie
・ Carl Siegmund Franz Credé
・ Carl Sigismund Kunth
・ Carl Sigman
・ Carl Sigurd Winther
・ Carl Silfverstrand
・ Carl Silvestri
・ Carl Simon
・ Carl Simpson
・ Carl Singer
・ Carl Rudolf, Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt
・ Carl Ruehrmund
・ Carl Ruggles
・ Carl Ruiterman
Carl Rungius
・ Carl Runk
・ Carl Russ
・ Carl Russell Fish
・ Carl Rustad
・ Carl Ryanen-Grant
・ Carl Ryden
・ Carl Ryder
・ Carl Rydquist
・ Carl Röchling
・ Carl Röver
・ Carl Rønneberg
・ Carl Røtjer
・ Carl Rüedi
・ Carl Rümpler


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Carl Rungius : ウィキペディア英語版
Carl Rungius

Carl Clemens Moritz Rungius (August 18, 1869 – October 21, 1959) was a leading American wildlife artist.〔 〕 He was born in Germany though he immigrated to the United States and he spent his career painting in the western United States and Canada. Active primarily in the first half of the 20th century, he earned a reputation as the most important big game painter and the first career wildlife artist in North America.
== Early life in Germany==
Rungius was born in Rixdorf, now a part of Berlin, Germany, to Pastor Heinrich Rungius (1833-1922) and Magdalene Fulda. Rungius spent most of his childhood in Britz, also part of Berlin. Rungius had seven sisters and one brother. His family had interests in art, nature, and taxidermy, and from an early age, Rungius enjoyed hunting and knew he wanted to be a wildlife painter. Upon reaching school age, Carl was sent away to live with his widowed grandmother in the village of Burg bei Magdeburg. He demonstrated a passion for hunting from a young age, and it’s this passion which would dominate his later life and be a tremendous influence on his artwork. From an early age, Rungius also showed ambition to be an artist. In his teenage years, an exhibition by Richard Friese, Germany’s foremost wildlife artist, reinforced Rungius’s ambition. He had several obstacles to overcome though before he would obtain his objective. Rungius had a tremendous dislike for school. Despite this, he completed his academic coursework and passed his examinations, qualifying for a mandatory year of military services. He served his one year of military service in 1891. His father also had strong oppositions to him becoming a painter. Eventually his father did relent, but only on the condition that Carl would start his profession in an acceptable fashion, by learning the trade of a house painter. For the next three summers, Rungius apprenticed as a wall and woodwork painter.
Rungius studied art at the Berlin Art Academy from 1888-1890. Rungius’s art education began with a course in ornamental design. He was not very interested in this however, and he increasingly spent his free time at the Berlin Zoo sketching and studying the animals there. Zoo animals were not subjects he could handle physically; he could not get under their skin and see for himself how muscle, bone, tendon and tissue melded together to form the living animal. In order to get a better look at the anatomy of animals, Rungius made frequent visits to the local glue factory to study animal anatomy in its most basic form. Rungius’s father often shot stray cats in his garden and would turn the carcass’s over to Carl. Although his work in the glue factory and with cats was unpleasant, Rungius felt it was critical to his artistic development.〔Jon Whyte and E.J Hart, Carl Rungius: Painter if the Western Wilderness, (Salem, New Hampshire: Salem House, 1985), 10.〕

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