He soon achieved great success as a painter and, in 1858, became a corresponding member of the "Cercle Artistique" in
Ghent. He was awarded the Medal for Art at the
World Exposition, Vienna, in 1873. His evocative landscapes earned him the nickname "Malenden Dichters" (The Painting Poet). Many of his commissions came from the
Rhein-Main region, but he also received an order from
Amorbach destined for
Queen Victoria in memory of her step-brother, Prince
Karl von Leiningen. For many years, he was a board member of the "Vereins für Geschichte und Altertumskunde" (Association for History and Archaeology) in his hometown. In this capacity, he was involved in the effort to preserve the
Goethe House, acting as treasurer for donations and contributions and instrumental in arranging its purchase by the "
Freies Deutsches Hochstift" in 1863. In 1867, he married the daughter of a wine merchant. The marriage was childless, and his wife acted as a sort of secretary, organizing and cataloguing his works. After his wife's death in 1892, he suffered a stroke that paralyzed his right side. When he appeared to be recovering, he came down with a kidney ailment, then influenza. He died near the end of 1893 and was buried in the Hauptfriedhof. A Plaza in Frankfurt has been named after him. == Work ==