C. Angerer & Göschl

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C. Angerer & Göschl Unternehmensbetriebsgesellschaft & Co, printing and trading company mbH

logo
legal form GmbH
founding 1870
Seat Vienna
management Gerhard Stepan
Branch Printers, hardware and hardware retailers
Website druck-tragtaschen-verpackung.at

Advertisement by C. Angerer & Göschl (1903)

C. Angerer & Göschl was an art, printing form manufacturing and reproduction company in Vienna .

history

The company was founded in 1870 by Carl Angerer (1838–1916). He dealt intensively with chemigraphic zinc etching and developed the Viennese etching method, which was revolutionary for the time .

Three years later, Carl's brother-in-law Alexander Göschl (1848–1900) became a partner. In 1877 a photo studio is rented and photography is included in the reproduction techniques. Over the years, the company has put almost all photographic printing techniques into practice, develops new processes and presents itself in numerous domestic and international exhibitions. Already in the early years Carl Angerer and Alexander Göschl were dominant in the European market, especially in the field of autotypical picture printing . For their services, the owners were appointed Imperial and Royal Chemigraphers .

They were considered to be clever company politicians who, through thorough development work, were able to offer ever better engineered reproduction processes at a high quality level.

The first location was in Hubergasse 15. There are records of locations in Ottakringer Straße 33 from 1880 and Ottakringer Straße 49 since 1899. In 1910 the company had 250 employees.

In 1916, Carl's son Alexander C. Angerer (1869–1950) took over the company. After the First World War, branches were opened abroad. Together with the publisher Ed. Hölzel & Co. and the Vienna Art Print Society, the company acquired the patent for the Uvachrome color process for Austria, Hungary, Yugoslavia and Romania around 1920. In 1921 the book “Fifty Years Angerer & Göschl. 1871–1921 ”, a memorandum for the company's 50th anniversary. Alexander was president of the Photographic Society from 1924 to 1938 .

The actor Helmuth Lohner and the musician and painter Karl Hodina learned the craft of chemigraphy here .

On March 31, 1983, the company was filed for bankruptcy. A newly founded company took over the name and now runs a conventional printing company in the 16th district of Vienna under it.

Awards

  • Voigtländer Prize; a medal in Vermeil for excellence in photocicotype, especially with the aid of the grain and clay paper you cited in 1883
  • Golden medal for art and science from Emperor Franz Josef I in 1884
  • K. uk Hof-Kunstanstalt wg. Participation as a member of the state banknote production in 1884

Secondary literature

  • NN: Comments on the art supplement ... In: Emil Hornig (Ed.): Photographische Correspondenz . tape 19 . Verlag Photographische Correspondenz, Vienna 1882, p. 95–96 (detailed description of the studio and production rooms and their equipment).
  • NN: Comments on the art supplement ... In: Emil Hornig (Ed.): Photographische Correspondenz . tape 19 . Verlag Photographische Correspondenz, Vienna 1882, p. 205-206 (zincography).
  • NN: Chemigraphy and heliotype in the Atelier C. Angerer & Göschl . In: Emil Hornig (Ed.): Photographische Correspondenz . tape 20 . Verlag Photographische Correspondenz, Vienna 1883, p. 95-96 .
  • Carl Angerer: The advances in photographic reproduction technology . In: Ludwig Cabinet (Ed.): Photographische Correspondenz . tape 22 . Verlag Photographische Correspondenz, Vienna 1885, p. 448-455 .

literature

  • O. Hochreiter, T. Starl: History of photography in Austria . 2 volumes, 1983.

Web links

Commons : C. Angerer & Göschl  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikisource: Photographic Correspondence  - Sources and Full Texts

Individual evidence

  1. Angerer Karl, chemigrapher (PDF; 184 kB) L .: Bll. f. Business d. Techn., Vol. 4, p. 13; Grand child Austrian; austrian-hungary. Buchdruckerztg., 1916-rl8
  2. The Albertina and Photography in the 19th Century (PDF file, p. 14; 246 kB) ( Memento of the original from September 18, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.albertina.at
  3. Photographische Correspondenz , Volume 20, 1883, p. 53
  4. Photographische Correspondenz , Volume 21, 1884, p. 17 and P. 70
  5. Photographische Correspondenz , Volume 21, 1884, p. 206

Coordinates: 48 ° 13 ′ 5.1 ″  N , 16 ° 19 ′ 29.6 ″  E