The New International Encyclopædia/Juengling, Frederick (1905)

JUENGLING, yŭng'lĭng, (1846-89). An American painter and wood-engraver, born in New York City. He studied painting at the Art Students' League there, but afterwards became widely known as a wood-engraver. He was the first secretary and one of the founders of the American Society of Wood-Engravers (1881). His paintings include &ldquo;The Intruder&rdquo; (1884), and &ldquo;In the Street&rdquo; (1886), and among his engravings are &ldquo;The Professor,&rdquo; after Duveneck, and &ldquo;The Voice of the Sea,&rdquo; after Quartley, both notable for the exactness with which he reproduced the original work. He obtained an honorable mention at the Salon of 1881, and a second class medal at the Munich Exhibition of 1883.