Bausch came from Bonn to the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. From 1835 to 1839, Karl Ferdinand Sohn was his teacher there.[1][2] After his studies, he worked in Düsseldorf and Bonn. In1839, he exhibited the picture Abraham and Isaac's sacrifice in Frankfurt. As a history painter, he attracted the attention of the art professor Rudolf Wiegmann with his paintings Gretchen and Martha (after Goethe's Faust) (1841) and Tempelritter auf der Morgenwache (1843).[3] However, Bausch made a name for himself as a portrait painter and portrait draughtsman in his home town of Bonn, where he especially created portraits of students,[4] mainly that of his nephew Hermann Deiters. Also well-known is his portrait of the astronomer Friedrich Wilhelm August Argelander from Bonn, painted around 1868.[5]
Orientalische Hafenstadt mit Dschunke und chinesischen Händlerbooten, Öl auf Platte, 32 × 46 cm[7]
Further reading
Hermann Board: Bausch, August. In Ulrich Thieme, Felix Becker (ed.): Thieme-Becker. Established by Ulrich Thieme and Felix Becker.. Vol. 3: Bassano–Bickham. Wilhelm Engelmann, Leipzig 1909, p. 93 (Textarchiv – Internet Archive).
^Sabine Gertrud Cremer: Nicolaus Christian Hohe (1798-1868). University drawing teacher in Bonn. Lit, Bonner Studien zur Kunstgeschichte, vol. 16, Münster 2001, ISBN978-3-8258-5550-5, p. 93
^Ralph Burmester, Jörg Bradenahl: Die Vermessung des Himmels. An exhibition at the Deutsches Museum Bonn. In Culture & Technology. Issue 1/2010, p. 49, PDF