Johann Jungblut was a German painter who focused on depicting winter landscapes of rural Netherlands, Germany, and Norway. Jungblut painted in a style which merged Impressionist techniques with the tradition of Dutch landscape painters like Aelbert Cuyp, Meindert Hobbema, and Jacob van Ruisdael.
Jungblut’s icy landscapes are contrasted with works byHans Thoma, a fellow German painter who portrayed pastoral vistas in a similar impressionist style. Both artists are expressive of Germany’s artistic tradition of immortalizing the Germanic landscape. Jungblut’s works are in the collection of The Institute in Keith, United Kingdom. The artist died on December 17, 1912 in Düsseldorf, Germany.