Annelise Reichmann

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Annelise Reichmann (born January 3, 1902 in Niederjeutz ; † November 21, 2000 in Bingen am Rhein ) was a German painter and graphic artist of the 20th century.

Life

In 1919 Annelise Reichmann moved with her family to Darmstadt . After studying art history and parallel drawing and painting lessons with Albert Hartmann at the Technical University in Darmstadt , she was a student of the Hanau painter Reinhold Ewald from 1925 to 1928 . In 1929 a one-year study visit to Paris followed.

Her apartment was destroyed in an air raid during World War II. Then Reichmann moved to Jugenheim an der Bergstrasse .

In 1948 she appointed Hans Soeder to the Werkkunstschule in Wiesbaden . There she taught woodcut and nature drawing. Reichmann had lived in Bingen am Rhein since the 1960s, without ever losing her strong ties to Darmstadt. 1952 to 1965 freelance glass designer at Grobbauer Glas in Darmstadt.

plant

Annelise Reichmann combined intellectual concentration and confident handling of the technical and manual means to create works of art of great intensity and quality. In addition to a work of woodcuts, in which she combined medieval rigor with expressive elements, and landscape and architecture - watercolors - she captured the war-torn Darmstadt, Bergstrasse, Odenwald and Rheingau in numerous sheets - she also created book illustrations for in the 1920s the "Society of Hessian Book Friends". 1952 Design of the main window “Archangel Michael” for the Church of Our Lady in Darmstadt in the glass painter's studio Grobbauer.

literature

  • Annelise Reichmann: in Darmstadt, around Darmstadt and around Darmstadt; Drawings, watercolors and woodcuts; [Catalog for the exhibition Annelise Reichmann. In Darmstadt, around Darmstadt and around Darmstadt. Drawings, watercolors and woodcuts, June 19 to October 28, 2005] / Kunst-Archiv Darmstadt. [Texts by Gisela Bergsträßer ... Ed., With text and biography vers. by Claus K. Netuschil ]. Darmstadt: Art Archive, 2005. 48 pp. ISBN 3-9808630-0-X go.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Stadtlexikon Darmstadt, Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 2006, p. 745