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Johann Karl Bähr

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Karl Bähr
Self-portrait (1820)
Born(1801-08-18)18 August 1801
Died29 September 1869(1869-09-29) (aged 68)
Occupation(s)Painter, writer

Johann Karl Bähr (1801–1869) was a German painter and writer.

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Transcription

Life

Bähr was born in Riga on 18 August 1801.[1] He studied under Matthaei in Dresden[2] and completed his art education with a visit to Italy in 1827–29.[1] He married in Dresden, then spent some time back in Riga, before settling permanently in Dresden in 1832.[1] He was made a Professor at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts in 1840.[2] Enthusiastic about poetry, he moved in the circle of Ludwig Tieck in Dresden, and was a close friend of Julius Mosen.[1]

He then worked again in Riga and finally went to Dresden for good in 1836.[3] Here he taught at the Art Academy from 1840, where he was appointed professor in 1846.[4]

Bähr was in demand as a portraitist, and also painted some historical works.[1] He wrote several books: Die Gräber der Liven (1850), a report on some archaeological excavations in Livonia which he undertook in 1846; Lectures on Dante's Divine Comedy (1853); Lectures on the Colour Theories of Newton and Goethe (1863) and The Dynamic Circle (1860–68), a scientific work which occupied him almost exclusively for the last ten years of his life.[1]

Bähr's large collection of Latvian medieval antiquities was purchased by the British Museum in 1852.[5]

He died at Dresden on 29 September 1869.[1]

Works

His paintings include:[2]

  • Virgil and Dante.
  • The Anabaptists in Münster (lithographed by Hanfstängl, and by Teichgräber).
  • Iwan the Cruel, of Russia, warned of his death by a Finnish Magician (signed and dated 1850); in the Dresden Galiery.
  • Christ and St. Thomas (at Kiev).
  • Christ on the Cross (at Zschopau),
  • Portrait of Julius Mosen (lithographed by Hanfstängl).

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Clauß, Carl (1875). Bähr, Johann Karl. Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Vol. 1. Historischen Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p. 769.
  2. ^ a b c Bryan,1886-9
  3. ^ "Brief an Herrn von Bose, als er aus Frankreich nach Italien reiste. Im Jahr 1764", Vermischte Gedichte, De Gruyter, pp. 3–9, 31 December 1832, doi:10.1515/9783111405759-001, ISBN 9783111042299, retrieved 13 October 2022
  4. ^ "Ernennung von Wiss. Direcktor H. Gottwald zum Direktor und Professor". Holz Als Roh- und Werkstoff. 39 (11): 476. November 1981. doi:10.1007/bf02606467. ISSN 0018-3768. S2CID 39621310.
  5. ^ British Museum Collection

Sources

Attribution:


This page was last edited on 14 March 2024, at 13:11
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