Anne-Marie Vogler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anne-Marie Vogler (born June 7, 1892 in Altona ; † May 30, 1983 in Hamburg ) was a German sculptor and graphic artist .

Live and act

Anne-Marie Vogler was born into a well-known upper-class merchant family. She had a brother named Fritz, whose violin she accompanied on the piano and with whom she planned a career as a musician together. When her brother died on the Somme during the First World War in 1916 , she decided to become a visual artist. From 1916 to 1918 she studied at the Hamburg School of Applied Arts in the graphic class of Carl Otto Czeschka , who suggested that she work with ivory .

After the end of the war there was inflation. Works of art made from ivory were therefore difficult to sell. Vogler therefore visited the handicrafts and arts and crafts in Altona from 1922 to 1922 and learned from wood sculptor August Henneberger . In the winter semester of 1925/26 she switched to the Royal School of Applied Arts in Munich and attended courses from Karl Killer . In the winter semester of 1926/27 she went to the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich , where she also studied architecture and Christian art under the direction of Killer. In 1929 Vogler opened his own studio in Berlin and learned from Georg Kolbe , who had a strong influence on her. In 1931 she went back to Hamburg, traveled to Florence for a longer period of time to study and then opened a studio on Mittelweg in her native city. Here she had a large circle of friends of spiritually interested people in the years that followed. These included painters such as Anita Rée , Gretchen Wohlwill , Fritz Kronenberg and Karl Kluth , the sculptors Hans Martin Ruwoldt and Karl August Ohrt and the actress Maria Wimmer . In addition to these artists, Senate Director Hans Stock and his wife Gabriele, the publisher Henry Goverts , the writers Horst Lange and Peter Gan , the classical philologist Bruno Snell and the surgeon Paul Sudeck were friends.

During the Nazi era , Anne-Marie Vogler joined a resistance group led by Felix Jud .

Anne-Marie Vogler died in Hamburg in 1983, she was buried in the area of ​​the Vogler family grave on the Ohlsdorf cemetery , grid square M 24 (opposite the water tower , Cordesallee). Her relief grave slab has been in the women's garden since August 2019 .

Works

Anne-Marie Vogler worked with a wide variety of materials and techniques. She made drawings, cuts from wood and linoleum and reliefs. She also made sculptures from plaster of paris, wood, stone, bronze and metal. Plaques and portrait busts are also among the works of art she creates.

In 1978 the Kunsthaus Hamburg showed works by Anne-Marie Vogler as part of a solo exhibition.

literature

  • Annemarie Vogler. In: Christian Otto Frenzel: Art in architecture in Hamburg 1947–1958. On behalf of and in cooperation with the Hamburg building authority. Axel Springer publishing house in Hamburg. Hammerich & Lesser, Hamburg 1959, pp. 122, 123.
  • Vogler, Anne Marie . In: Hans Vollmer (Hrsg.): General Lexicon of Fine Artists of the XX. Century. tape 6 , supplements H-Z . EA Seemann, Leipzig 1962, p. 463 .
  • Vogler, Annemarie. In: Heinz Spielmann : Sculptor in Hamburg 1900–1972 , Professional Association of Visual Artists Hamburg (ed.), Hans Christians Verlag, Hamburg 1972, ISBN 978-3-7672-0194-1 (not paginated ).
  • Anne-Marie Vogler. In: Elisabeth Axmann (Red.): Artists in Hamburg . Ed .: Hamburg Cultural Authority, Christians Verlag, Hamburg 1982, ISBN 978-3-7672-0749-3 (not paginated).
  • Vogler, Annemarie. In: Heinz Zabel : Plastic Art in Hamburg - Sculptures and Sculptures in Public Space , 2nd edition, Dialog-Verlag, Reinbek 1987, ISBN 3-923707-15-0 , pp. 24, 48, 106.
  • Emma Vogler (Ed.), Brita Reimers: Anne-Marie Vogler. Life and Work , Dölling and Galitz, Hamburg 1996, ISBN 978-3-930802425 .
  • Maike Bruhns : Art in Crisis. Vol. 1: Hamburg Art in the “Third Reich”. Dölling and Galitz, Munich / Hamburg 2001, ISBN 3-933374-94-4 .
  • Brita Reimers: Vogler, Anne-Marie . In: Franklin Kopitzsch, Dirk Brietzke (Hrsg.): Hamburgische Biographie . tape 3 . Wallstein, Göttingen 2006, ISBN 3-8353-0081-4 , p. 394-395 .
  • SAGA GWG : Art in the district. Hamburg's major landlord promotes culture in the districts. Examples from eight decades by Friederike Weimar and Ute Janssen, Hamburg 2008, pp. 70, 71 ( PDF file )
  • Birgit Ahrens: Vogler, Anne-Marie. In: The new rump. Lexicon of visual artists from Hamburg, Altona and the surrounding area . Ed .: Rump family. Revised new edition of Ernst Rump's lexicon ; supplemented and revised by Maike Bruhns, Wachholtz, Neumünster 2013, ISBN 978-3-529-02792-5 , p. 484.
  • Citizenship of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg : Works of art in public space , Hamburg, August 14, 2018, pp. 4, 12, 19, 29 ( PDF file )

Web links

Commons : Anne-Marie Vogler  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Grave location
  2. Illustration of summer rest at sh-kunst.de
  3. Flute player at Düppelstrasse 2