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Carl Spitzweg

5th February 1808 – 23th September 1885

Carl Spitzweg was born on 5th of February in 1808 in Unterpfaffenhofen, Bavaria. Although trained as a chemist, he discovered quite early his talent for drawing and his affinity with art. Spitzweg travelled extensively during his lifetime and the impressions formed by his travels greatly influenced his work. Shortly after completing his studies in pharmaceutics in 1832, he visited Italy. It was particularly in the cities of Florence, Rome, and Naples that he discovered the many significant works of Western culture which were to leave a permanent imprint on him.

A severe case of dysentery in 1833 strengthened his resolve to abandon his career as a chemist and he proceeded to commit himself solely to his painting. In June 1835, he became a member of the Munich Art Association and travelled that same year to southern Tirol with the landscape painter Eduard Schleich, the Elder.

In 1839 he completed his first painting entitled ''The Poor Poet'. Although this recurring motif would later be considered his most well-known body of work, the painting was not accepted at this time by the jury of the Munich Art Association.

As regards his graphic production, the first publication in 1844 of his own illustrations in the Munich weekly paper 'Fliegende Blätter' is considered quite significant. His visits to the Industrial Exposition in Paris and the World's Fair exhibition in London in 1851 were his first contact with the Oriental scenes which would begin to inform his work.

To the deserving painter were bestowed numerous honours during the second half of Spitzweg's lifetime: in 1865 the Bavarian Royal Merit Order of St. Michael was conferred upon him, and in 1875 he was named an honorary member of the Academy of Fine Arts.

Carl Spitzweg died on 23th of September in 1885 and was entombed in the historic South Cemetery in Munich.

He leaves behind a body of work dedicated to the townspeople who inhibit his genre scenes, and with acute and pointed, but never ill-natured humour he portrays the everday bourgeois life of his time.

Lit: Siegfried Wichmann, Carl Spitzweg. Verzeichnis der Werke, Gemälde und Aquarelle, Stuttgart: Belser, 2002.

Carl Spitzweg

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3290
Winterauktionen 19.–20.11.2021
Romanticist landscape painter
France 1st half 19th C.
Farmhouse thatched with straw on the track near the village pond.
Oil on canvas. Unsigned. Verso stamp of the artist's supplies store Alphonse Giroux, Paris, twice. Verso on the back of the frame indistinctly inscribed.
H 44, W 66 cm (support). Original elaborate frame.
Alphonse Giroux (1776 - 1848), named on the stamps of the canvas, was a versatile entrepreneur who worked in Paris as a painter, art restorer and ebonist, among other things, and whose cabinetmaking business flourished during the era of the Bourbon kings Louis XVIII and Charles X. His restoration work included the renovation of the Notre-Dame Cathedral. One of his sons, André Giroux (1801 - 1879), embarked on a career as a landscape painter and was awarded the Prix de Rome in 1825.
Provenance: Fischer, Lucerne, auction 409 H, 24.11.2010, lot 1149; since then private collection Schluchsee.
Invoice: Fischer, Lucerne, 25.11.2010, invoice amount 3357,10 CHF (ca. 3101 €), in copy.

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hammer price: 500,- EUR
(starting price: 500,- EUR)