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Professor Hermann Dischler

25th September 1866 – 20th March 1935

Hermann Dischler was born on the 25th of September in 1866 in Freiburg i.Br. He received his artistic training in the art school in Karlsruhe, he was student of Gustav Schönleber. Thereafter he was engaged as a painter in the Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald area.

1894, after he finished his studies, he built himself an artist’s workroom in Freiburg i.Br. At this time he went on a lot of trips and his trusty camera followed him everywhere. Five years later he started to number and comment his artworks, which he collected in 29 «Bildbüchern (books of pictures)».

In the winter months from 1905 to 1907 he stayed in the Todtnauer Hütte, where a lot of his oil studies arise.
The snowy winter landscapes became his typical theme and he called himself «Schneemoler (snowpainter)». 1917 he received his professorship by Grand Duke Friedrich II.

In 1927 he had an exhibition with artists like Curt Liebich, Julius Heffner, Wilhelm Nagel, Wilhelm Wickertsheimer a.o., they called themselves «Die Schwarzwälder (the Black Forests)». He died on the 20th of March in 1935 in Hinterzarten. Today his works are extremely appreciated because the snowy landscape present the untouched nature.

Lit: Exhibition Catalogue Augustiner Museum, Freiburg i.Br., 1993

Professor Hermann Dischler

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 Image under artist's copyright.

3161
Winterauktionen 24.–25.11.2023
Luetzelschwab, Patrick
Born 1976 Freiburg i.Br., lives and works in Weil a. Rhein.
«Schwarzwald 01 (Black Forest 01)».
Serigraph with pochoir and spray paint on panel. Verso signed, dated 2019, titled as well as artist's stamp.
H 75, W 56 (support). Artist's frame.
«The pandemic has taken the artist on countless walks through nearby forests and meadows. Beyond all natural romanticism, the warning signs of the creeping and sometimes obvious destruction captivated him and inspired him to numerous screen prints on wood and wood veneer. The wood tone and the natural grain against a nebulous background and the silhouette of the once unfathomable forest stand for natural processes of change as well as for threats to biodiversity, which are ultimately the basis of our lives. There are no apocalyptic motifs, but intuitive perceptions of changes in aesthetically touching time markers.» from: Link.
Provenance: private collection Dreiländereck.

Condition report  


 

starting price: 400,- EUR