Henriette Paula Häberlin

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Henriette Paula Häberlin (born August 25, 1882 as Henriette Paula Baruch in Lehnin , Brandenburg province ; † July 5, 1968 in Basel , Switzerland ) was a German-Swiss draftsman , graphic artist and painter .

Life

Paula Baruch, daughter of the Jewish family doctor and botanist Dr. med. Max Baruch (1853–1937) and his wife Franziska, née Knabe, grew up in Paderborn . As a private student of Wilhelm Schneider-Didam , Eugen Kampf and Willy Spatz , she studied painting in Düsseldorf from 1900 to 1902 . In the “Hungerturm” on Düsseldorf's Eiskellerberg , she attended the private painting school run by Schneider-Didam and Kampf, which primarily taught her the basics of drawing. Then she attended the painting school of the Munich Artists' Association . In Munich were Christian Landsberger , Henry Knirr and Angelo Jank their teachers. Study trips took her to Italy and Yugoslavia , the Netherlands and Brittany, and Mallorca .

After several years of engagement, she married the Swiss philosopher, psychologist and educator Paul Häberlin on April 2, 1908 . She had met him in 1901 when he was working as a tutor in Paderborn. From 1905 she lived with Häberlin in Kreuzlingen , later in Aesch and Binningen ( Canton Basel-Landschaft ), and from around 1914 in Bern . The couple's third child, Annemarie , who later became a psychologist, was born in Bern in 1917 . In 1922 the family moved to Basel, where Paul Häberlin held a chair for philosophy, psychology and education until his retirement.

With her oil paintings - still lifes, landscapes, nudes, figures and portraits - she has appeared in Swiss and German art exhibitions since 1906, in Zurich , Basel, Munich and Baden-Baden . In 1928 she captured her husband in a portrait.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The time in the Paderborn idyll. Website in the portal hiergeblieben.de , article from January 13, 2009 in the Paderborner Kreiszeitung / Neue Westfälische , accessed on December 14, 2019.
  2. ^ Museum Kunstpalast : Artists of the Düsseldorf School of Painting. (Selection, as of November 2016, PDF )
  3. ^ Paula Häberlin: XXIV . In: Swiss Art . 1944, issue 5, p. 38. ( digitized version )
  4. ^ Paul Häberlin - Ludwig Binswanger. Correspondence 1908–1960. Schwabe, Basel 1997, p. 89, footnotes 4 and 5.