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Old monk in front of the hermitage

Old monk in front of the hermitage

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Egyptian monuments

Egyptian monuments

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Kunstdrucke von Carl Spitzweg

Collection: Art prints by Carl Spitzweg

Carl Spitzweg was a German painter and is considered one of the most popular and idiosyncratic representatives of the German Biedermeier style in the 19th century. He was born in Munich in 1808 and initially began his career as a pharmacist, as his bourgeois family had planned a solid, practical professional career for him. It was only after a serious illness, which allowed him to take some time out, that he finally decided to take up painting - a decision he implemented as a largely self-taught artist without ever completing a full academy education. Trips to Prague, Venice, Paris and London as well as his intensive study of the works of 17th century Dutch genre painting and the French Barbizon School had a lasting influence on his artistic development.

In his early works, Spitzweg primarily devoted himself to humorous and satirical depictions of petty bourgeois life, which he initially also realized as a draughtsman for the Munich weekly magazine "Fliegende Blätter". Eccentric scholars, dreaming poets, bizarre civil servants and headstrong eccentrics populate these early works, which immediately found a broad resonance thanks to their affectionate, never malicious humor and narrative precision. This talent for observing the absurd and comical in everyday life remained a characteristic of his entire oeuvre, even as his painting style became increasingly refined and enriched over the years.

A central feature of Spitzweg's mature work was the combination of humorous observation of people and atmospheric depictions of landscapes. His depictions of bookworms in dusty libraries, of hermits in picturesque rocky landscapes and of lovers in romantic garden corners are famous - pictures in which figure and surroundings merge so intimately that neither would be conceivable without the other. These works reveal his masterful ability to depict human weaknesses and idiosyncrasies with a mildness and cheerfulness that never turns into bitterness or contempt, but is always borne by a fundamental affection for people and their inexhaustible absurdity. His most famous work in particular, "The Poor Poet" from 1839, condenses this attitude into an image of everlasting impact.

In addition to his work as a painter, Spitzweg was a respected figure in Munich's artistic life, but he consciously kept out of the major institutional contexts and preferred the path of an independent artist, unaffiliated with any school or academy. This independence allowed him a painterly freedom that led his late work in a direction that surprised his contemporaries: under the influence of French Impressionism, Spitzweg developed an increasingly loose, boldly colored style of painting in his final years, which took him far beyond the boundaries of Biedermeier and lent his late works a fresh, almost modern quality.

Carl Spitzweg died in Munich in 1885, leaving behind a body of work that had enjoyed great popularity during his lifetime and has retained this popularity to this day. Unlike many of his contemporaries, he did not experience a phase of oblivion or reappraisal, but remained ever-present to the German public. Today, Carl Spitzweg is considered one of the most endearing and characteristic figures in German art history, whose works are represented in major German museums and consistently fetch high prices on the art market, while his depictions of everyday Biedermeier life are valued as inexhaustible and timeless testimonies to a bygone world that he captured forever with humor, warmth and painterly mastery.