Ernst Hürlimann

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Ernst Hürlimann (born November 15, 1921 in Oberstaufen im Allgäu , † February 24, 2001 in Munich ) was a German architect and cartoonist . He studied at the Blocher School in Munich.

Grave no. 41 in the Bogenhausen cemetery

Hürlimann's drawings were mostly apolitical, rather he took everyday life in Munich and especially in Schwabing as the target of his caricatures.

Many of his more than 3,000 drawings were published in the weekend editions of the Süddeutsche Zeitung . His best-known figure is "Blasius", the illustration from Sigi Sommer's local column, Blasius, the Walker . In 1970 Hürlimann was awarded the Schwabing Art Prize.

Hürlimann worked as an architect in Munich from the 1960s to the 1980s, including for Neue Heimat in the emerging Munich satellite towns, initially in Hasenbergl and later also in Neuperlach . Among other things, the pep shopping center there comes from Hürlimann .

Ernst Hürlimann is buried in the Bogenhausen cemetery in Munich (grave wall on the left no. 41).

Works (excerpt)

  • Ernst Hürlimann's Lebenshilfe Gesundheit , Munich
  • The ideal hobby gardener , Munich
  • Ernst Hürlimann's Handbook for Dreamers , (together with Helmut Seitz), Munich ( ISBN 3-7634-0624-7 )
  • Eahm look o or now take a look at it , (together with Bernhard Pollak), Munich ( ISBN 3-7991-6170-8 )
  • Yes, so san s' or Yes, so they are: From the everyday life of a million- dollar village, (together with Bernhard Pollak), Feder Verlag G. Tomkowitz oHG, 1960, Munich

literature

  • Süddeutscher Verlag - Ernst Hürlimann: One last yes so sans or yes so they are , Munich ( ISBN 3-8661-5223-X )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.stadtiertel24.de/?Geschichte/Hasenbergl