Karl Hagemeister (12 March 1848 in Werder – 5 August 1933 in Werder) was a German landscape painter.

Karl Hagemeister
a painted portrait in which a woman is serving fruit in a bowl to a seated Karl Hagemeister
Karl Hagemeister with a model
"Adam and Eve in Costume"
by Wilhelm Trübner (1873)
Born(1848-03-12)12 March 1848
Died5 August 1933(1933-08-05) (aged 85)
Werder
NationalityGerman
Alma materWeimar Princely Free Drawing School

Life edit

He was the son of a fruit grower and developed an early interest in nature from the forested, watery surroundings of his birthplace. He trained as a teacher in Köpenick, then went to teach elementary school in Berlin,[1] where he caught the attention of landscape painter Ferdinand Bellermann, who saw him at work in Schönhausen Palace park.[2]

Bellermann convinced Hagemeister to give up his plans to become a drawing teacher and be an artist instead, helping him to obtain a position in the studios of Friedrich Preller. From 1871 to 1873, he received classically oriented training at Preller's Weimar Princely Free Drawing School,[2] where he was introduced to Philipp Otto Runge's Farbenkugel and Goethe's Theory of Colours, both of which would heavily influence his thinking on the subject.

 
Portrait of Hagemeister by Carl Schuch (1876)

Beginning in 1873, he embarked on a long series of study trips, during which he became friends with Carl Schuch and, later, with Wilhelm Trübner. The three spent a year studying the Old Masters in the Netherlands, then Hagemeister went on to Italy, where he remained until 1876, when he returned to Werder.[2] Later, he would travel throughout Germany seeking subject matter and gradually began to include figures in his landscapes, employing maids and farmers as models.

In 1884, Schuch persuaded Hagemeister to accompany him on a trip to Paris, where they both received their first exposure to the Barbizon School. Unfortunately, this trip also ended their friendship; apparently because Schuch was jealous of the faster stylistic progress that Hagemeister was making.[2]

Later career edit

Back in Werder, Hagemeister increasingly gave up his oil paints and began to work with oil pastel chunks. Although he never formally became an art teacher at any academy, he never rejected anyone who sought out his artistic advice. He later became one of the founding members of the Berlin Secession. In 1912, he gave private art lessons to seventeen-year-old Prince Friedrich Leopold, at the Prince's request.[1] He exhibited extensively and, in 1913, was awarded the Bavarian "Order of Merit for Sciences and Arts". The following year, he was named a "Royal Prussian Professor" (a largely ceremonial title that did not involve any teaching).[1] Two years later, he became ill, possibly from lead poisoning from the paints he used, and gave up painting.[3] Most of what he had earned disappeared in the hyper-inflation following World War I. In 1923, he was named a member of the Academy of Arts. He never fully recovered from his illness and died while living with his brother at the family farmhouse.

Selected paintings edit

Writings edit

  • Carl Schuch. Sein Leben und seine Werke (Carl Schuch, His Life and His Work), Cassirer, Berlin 1913
  • Kleine Selbstbiographie (Short Autobiography), Werder, 1928

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Hagemeister Archiv and Werkverzeichnis: Chronology
  2. ^ a b c d Havelländische Malerkolonie: Brief biography
  3. ^ Anja Möller: Karl Hagemeister – von Werder bis Lohme, Edition A.B.Fischer, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-937434-13-5.

Further reading edit

  • Margrit Bröhan: Karl Hagemeister (1848-1933). Gemälde, Pastelle, Zeichnungen, Nicolai, Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-87584-698-2.
  • Irmgard Wirth (1966), "Hagemeister, Carl", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 7, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 469–470; (full text online).
  • Catalog Siegward Sprotte - Im Dialog mit Karl Hagemeister, Exhibition catalog from the Museum der Havelländischen Malerkolonie (includes the entire Selbstbiographie).

External links edit