Anna Maria von Oer

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Anna Maria Freiin von Oer (born December 9, 1846 in Dresden ; † November 22, 1929 in Gößweinstein , Upper Franconia ) was a German painter from the Düsseldorf School .

Life

Anna Maria von Oer, offspring of the baronial Westphalian noble family von Oer , one of eight children of the history painter and Dresden academy teacher Theobald von Oer and his wife Marie Ernestine, née Schumann (1816–1878), was introduced to painting by her father. Later they settled in Dusseldorf of Ernst Deger and Franz Ittenbach in spätnazarenischen direction of the Düsseldorf School to teach. It was religious art that shaped her work from then on, for example altar and devotional pictures for the Marienkirche in Hanover, the Canisiuskirche in Vienna, the Cathedral of Fulda and the Church of the Gray Sisters in Dresden. She provided templates for the images of saints of the Düsseldorf Association for the Dissemination of Religious Images and for the religious prints from other editors and publishers. In the 1880s she moved to Bamberg , and in 1897 she finally settled in Gößweinstein.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Biographies and Pictures , website in the duelmen.de portal , accessed on December 24, 2016.
  2. ^ Edmund Schwickert: The artists of the association for the spread of religious images in Düsseldorf. Frankfurt am Main 1895, pp. 45-48.
  3. Heinz-Peter Mielke: God for honor. To the picture program of the art publisher B. Kühlen in Mönchengladbach . In: Dieter Harmening, Erich Wimmer (ed.): Folk culture - history - religion. Königshausen & Neumann, Würzburg 1992, ISBN 3-88479-709-3 , p. 475 ff. ( Books.google.de ).