Johann’s work is defined by its painter sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Oenotria Telus, An Idealized Woodland Scene Near Naples
Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein German, 1751-1829

Hercules and Omphale
Johannes Tischbein German, 1722-1789

Thetis and Achilles
Johann Heinrich Tischbein, I German, 1722-1789

A Lady
Johann Friedrich August Tischbein (German, 1750–1812)

Three Female Bathers, Two in the Water, the Third Getting in by Herself
Johann Heinrich Tischbein, I German, 1722-1789

Susanna Surprised by the Elders, from The Story of Susanna
Heinrich Aldegrever German, 1502-c.1560

Helen
Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein (German, 1751–1829)

The Last Words of Jean Jacques Rousseau
Heinrich Guttenberg (German, 1749-1818) after Jean Michel Moreau (French, 1741-1814)

The Lovers
Johann Heinrich Ramberg German, 1763-1840

Panel of Ornament with Two Nude Boys Standing on the Legs of a Satyr
Heinrich Aldegrever German, 1502-c.1560

Unobserved Man Spying on Reclining Lovers
Johann Heinrich Ramberg German, 1763-1840

Paris
Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein (German, 1751–1829)

Descent from the Cross with a Silhouette of Jerusalem in the Background
Franz Johann Heinrich Nadorp German, 1794-1876

Landscape
Heinrich Campendonk German, 1889–1957

Bearded Man Spying on Lovers Under an Arbor
Johann Heinrich Ramberg German, 1763-1840

Three Beavers Building a Dam
J. H. W. Tischbein German, 1751–1829

From Brittany
Heinrich Campendonk German, 1889-1957

Christ in the Storm
Heinrich Jansen (Danish, 1625–1667)

Oh How Beautiful is God's Nature
Johann Heinrich Lips Swiss, 1758-1817

The Actors Tamazawa Saijiro I as the pageboy Umezaburo and Segawa Kikunojo I as Oroku in the play "Sazareishi Suehiro Genji," performed at the Nakamura Theater in the first month, 1744
Torii Kiyomasu II Japanese, 1706 (?)–1763 (?)