His father, Johan Ditlev Buntzen, was a merchant. He began developing his artistic talents in Kiel, partly by taking lessons from the Bünsow brothers, and , partly by self-study; copying the etchings of
Antonie Waterloo. In 1821, he went to Copenhagen, where he studied at the
Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, with
Johan Ludwig Lund and
Jens Peter Møller. His first showing was at an exhibition in
Charlottenborg Palace in 1824 and, later, he won several prizes for his landscape paintings. During the 1830s, the academy purchased several of his works, as did the
Royal Collection. In 1833, he married Caroline Birgitte Hansen (1805–1882), the daughter of a "" (someone who makes equipment for sailing ships). They spent most of their married life in a small rural home, just outside of
Charlottenlund. He received two major travel grants: in 1838, from the , a fund for promoting the arts and sciences, then, in 1840, from the Royal Academy. Much of this time was spent in Italy. When he returned home, in 1842, he became an (a type of member candidate) at the academy, then a full member in 1850. He was named a professor in 1863, and was given a lifetime
Sødring Endowment in 1868. He was awarded the
Order of the Dannebrog in 1877. ==Sources==