Carl Friedrich Hagemann
Carl Friedrich Hagemann (born November 11, 1772 in Berlin ; † February 24, 1806 there ) was a German sculptor .
Life
As a student of Johann Gottfried Schadow , Hagemann sent the exhibitions of the Prussian Academy of the Arts with smaller copies of works from antiquity between 1793 and 1795 . From 1797 he exhibited his own works. In 1801 he was elected a member of the academy himself. In 1802/03 he was in Rome , where he met Bertel Thorvaldsen . In 1801 he was moved to Königsberg i. Pr. To depict the 77-year-old Immanuel Kant as a bust. He was only 33 years old.
Most of his works are lost. Schadow and others boasted that "no artist can depict the female figure as pleasantly as Hagemann". Oskar Ehrhardt rescued the Kant bust in 1945 from the rubble of the Albertus University in Königsberg .
Works
- Immanuel Kant in the Hamburger Kunsthalle
- Apollo
- Discobolos
- Medicean Venus (see Uffizi Gallery )
- Antinous
- Sleeping Endymion in Marble (1797)
- Lying naiad with a pearl oyster playing (1802)
- Reclining bacchante with bowl and watering can (1804)
Exhibitions
- 1964/65 National Gallery (Berlin)
See also
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Baptismal register garrison parish, No. 118/1772
- ↑ Death Register of the Jerusalem Church, No. 128/1806
- ↑ a b Register of the ADK
- ↑ ADK
- ↑ a b Kantiana (University of Mainz) (PDF; 63 kB)
- ↑ Das Ostpreußenblatt / Preußische Allgemeine Zeitung: Art history: Immanuel Kant in Marmor , June 22, 2002, accessed via webarchiv-server.de on March 7, 2019
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Hagemann, Carl Friedrich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Hagemann, Friedrich |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German sculptor |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 11, 1772 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Berlin |
DATE OF DEATH | February 24, 1806 |
Place of death | Berlin |