Georg Wilhelm Degode (6 February 1862 – 26 November 1931) was a German landscape painter and photographer; associated with the Düsseldorfer Malerschule.
At the age of thirteen, he persuaded them to let him take drawing lessons from the curator at a local art gallery.
Later, he studied with Carl Jungheim, Heinrich Deiters [de] and Eugen Dücker, as well as taking private lessons.
In 1898, he purchased a large home in Düsseldorf's Kaisersweth district, originally built as a clerical house in 1704.
Under his ownership, it served as a gathering place for most of the prominent artists in the city's art community, as well as writers, including Herbert Eulenberg.