CLARA VON WILLE
German, 1838-1883Clara von Wille, née Clara Maria Alexandra von Böttcher (1838, Düsseldorf – 15 March 1883), was the youngest of four daughters born to the Royal Prussian Hussar, Major Carl Friedrich von Böttcher (1785–1857), and his wife Juliane Wilhelmine Charlotte von Buggenhagen (1797–1871).
In 1859, she married the landscape and genre painter, August von Wille. Their son, Fritz, also became a well-known landscape painter.
She was a private student of Karl Ferdinand Sohn and Ludwig Knaus. Later, she studied with the famous French animal painter, Rosa Bonheur. Her first exhibited painting was “Resting Hunting Dogs”, shown at the Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen [de] in 1857. Later, her works were regularly displayed at the Eduard Schulte Galleries [de] and at the Bismeyer & Kraus Gallery. Several of her works were purchased for a lottery, conducted by the Zentral-Dombau-Verein zu Köln, to raise money for completing the construction of Cologne Cathedral. Many of her most popular paintings were reproduced in illustrated magazines and as wood engravings.