Heinrich von Bandel

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Heinrich von Bandel , also: Heinrich Bandel , (born June 23, 1829 in Munich , † October 10, 1864 in London ) was a German sculptor .

Life

Heinrich von Bandel was one of seven children of the sculptor Ernst von Bandel and his wife Caroline von Kohlhagen, who was married in 1828. Similar to his younger brother Roderich von Bandel , Heinrich's musical talent, especially for portrait busts and reliefs, was already evident in his early childhood. He received his first training from his father. In 1844 and 1845 the young bandel worked in the Italian cities of Carrara and Rome .

At the age of about 20 Heinrich von Bandel went to London in 1849, where he first “worked for the sculptor Camphel” and created “a model of a portrait statue for a sculptor” before he then formed various independent works of art, most of which he designed based on ancient motifs. His London works include a statue of the young Achilles , a riding Bachantin and a dying Amazon .

From 1853 to 1861, Bandel exhibited various works at the Royal Academy of Arts . During this period he temporarily lived and worked in Linden near Hanover and, like his father, took part as an exhibitor at the First General German Industrial Exhibition in Munich in 1854. There he presented the bronze group " Bachantin with a Satyr ", which he designed and cast by C. Bernstorff & Eichwede . Around the same time, a 1845 dated portrait of relief was Prince Leopold II. To the lip , the result of the partially ligature suggests a collaboration between Henry and his father Joseph Ernst von Bandel "1845 Heinrich JEvB" given name.

During the annual exhibition of the Art Association for the Kingdom of Hanover in 1850 in the Künstlerhaus Hanover , an arbitral tribunal selected various works from the works shown there for raffle; the sculptures, the marble relief The Dancing by Ernst von Bandel, the plaster relief Amazone, a horse soaking , and modeled in plaster statuette A Valkyrie , meth ranging from the then acting in Lüneburg Wilhelm Engelhard .

The last work of the sculptor, who died as a young man in London, was a life-size “ mignon ” carved in marble .

Other works

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Bandel, Heinrich von , in Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie , Second, revised and expanded edition, Volume 1: Aachen - Braniß , KG Saur Verlag, Munich 2005, ISBN 3-598-25031-2 and 978-3- 598-25031-6, p. 359 limited preview in Google Book search.
  2. ^ Margarete Braun-Ronsdorf:  Bandel, Ernst Joseph von. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 1, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1953, ISBN 3-428-00182-6 , p. 574 ( digitized version ).
  3. ^ A b Brigitte Bötel: Joseph Ernst von Bandel (1800–1876). The sculptural work. Dissertation University of Göttingen 1984, p. 20; Preview over google books
  4. a b c d e f Hyacinth Holland:  Bandel, Ernst von . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 46, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1902, p. 204 (in the article on the father).
  5. ^ Catalog of the General German Industrial Exhibition in Munich in 1854 , p. 92; Digitized via Google books
  6. Friedrich Eggers (ed.): Kunstvereine / From the report of the Kunstverein for the Kingdom of Hanover from May 1, 1849 to then 1850 , in this: Deutsches Kunstblatt . Fine arts newspaper. Organ der Deutschen Kunstvereine , edition 2 of January 13, 1851, published by Rudolph and Theodor Oswald Weigel, Berlin 1851, p. 15f .; Digitized via Google books