Hollerhaus Irschenhausen

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The Hollerhaus at Neufahrner Weg 3 in the Ickingen district of Irschenhausen
Hollerhaus Irschenhausen

The Hollerhaus Irschenhausen is a cultural meeting point for readings, exhibitions and concerts in the Irschenhausen district of the Upper Bavarian community of Icking in the Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen district . It is a former farmhouse from the 14th or 15th century with an art gallery added later . The Hollerhaus achieved national fame as "Pension Resi" in the television crime series Der Bulle von Tölz .

history

The house was probably built between 1313 and 1457. In 1910 the Berlin painter Clara Porges and her husband, the Austrian violinist Friedrich Porges, bought the building and named it "Hollerhaus" because of the large elder bush in the garden. They had a gallery added, which opened in 1917.

The next owner was the journalist and co-founder of the daily Münchner Merkur , Felix Buttersack . He bought the property for his sister, Baroness Marianne von Beaulieu, who, together with her daughter Ingrid Lepsius, turned the Hollerhaus into a pension and an artists' meeting place. Then moved Adolf Erbslöh , a co-founder of the New Artists' Association Munich (NKVM) involuntarily into private life after Irschenhausen back and painted his paintings from 1934 to 1937 in the gallery of the Holler House because after the seizure of Nazi painting many artists as degenerate was ostracized . Wilhelm Hegeler wrote the novel Das Gewitter while he lived there ; as did Werner Enke , who wrote the screenplay for the comedy film On the subject, sweetheart , in which he also played a leading role alongside Uschi Glas .

From 1995 to 2008 the Hollerhaus served as "Pension Resi" in all 69 episodes of the crime series Der Bulle von Tölz .

Lia Schneider-Stöckl has been running the Hollerhaus since Ingrid Lepsius' death in 2004.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Anniversary celebration in Irschenhausen - "It's stuck in the walls" - Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen - Süddeutsche.de from July 12, 2017 , accessed on July 22, 2019
  2. a b Das Hollerhaus: Refuge in the Isar Valley - Land and People - Bavaria 2 - Radio - br.de of October 29, 2017 , accessed on July 22, 2019
  3. Hollerhaus celebrates its 100th birthday - Icking - merkur.de , accessed on July 22, 2019
  4. Bernd Fäthke: Alexej Jawlensky, heads etched and painted, The Wiesbaden years . Exhibition catalog. Galerie Draheim, Wiesbaden 2012, ISBN 978-3-00-037815-7 , p. 35 ff.

Coordinates: 47 ° 58 ′ 6.1 ″  N , 11 ° 26 ′ 8.6 ″  E