Hans Stübner

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hans Stübner (born August 21, 1900 in Berlin-Friedrichshain ; † December 16, 1973 ) was a German painter and visual artist.

Hans Stübner was born in 1900 in Berlin-Friedrichshain as the son of Emil-Franz-Robert Stübner and Sofie-Anna-Klara Wagner. The grandfather Karl-Robert Stübner was a cooper. As a schoolboy, he earned money in the Lindhorst art workshop and began with his first own designs for picture tapestries. In 1917 he was drafted into the military.

In November 1919 he was accepted into the United State Schools for Free and Applied Arts in Berlin and studied with Ferdinand Spiegel . In 1929 he was a master student at the Prussian Academy of Arts with Arthur Kampf and Pfannenschmid. In 1936 he designed illustrations for the program for the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin .

On November 6, 1937, he married Irmtraut Richter in Berlin-Lankwitz , whom he had met in 1932. In 1938 the daughter Anke was born. In 1941 he was drafted again for military service, which he did as a war reporter in the Giant Mountains and later on the French Atlantic coast.

In 1950 he was appointed lecturer for free painting and tapestries at the Staatliche Werkkunstschule Berlin (Academy for Craft Art and Fashion, today: University of the Arts Berlin ), where he worked until his retirement in 1966.

Until his death in 1973, Hans Stübner lived and worked as a freelance painter in Berlin . Works by Hans Stübner can be found in the collections of the following museums: Berlinische Galerie, Berlin Museum, Lehmbruck Museum ( Duisburg ), Museum of the City of Nordhausen , Stadtische Schloßgalerie Oberhausen , Museum of Art History ( Osnabrück ), Stiftland Museum ( Waldsassen ).

Hans Stübner died in 1973 at the age of 73. His grave is in the Evangelical Cemetery Nikolassee in Berlin.

Stübner's extensive estate is looked after by the Schulz Stübner Foundation “A Life with Pictures”.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende: Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 , p. 628.