Johann Georg Däringer

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Johann Georg Däringer (born April 20, 1759 in Ried im Innkreis , † January 13, 1809 in Wieden ) was an Austrian history painter .

Life

High altar picture in the church at the court (1789)

Däringer, an orphan, came to Vienna around 1780. From 1786 he received training under Hubert Maurer at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna . In 1801 he was appointed provisional proofreader at the academy and in 1808/1809 he was appointed real.

Among other things, Däringer created the high altar picture in the former Jesuit church (today's name: Kirche am Hof ) based on a design by Hubert Maurer .

Works

  • Hercules defeats Cacus , oil on canvas, GG-125

literature

  • Constantin von Wurzbach : Daeringer, Johann Georg . In: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich . 3rd part. Typogr.-literar.-artist publishing house. Establishment (L. C. Zamarski, C. Dittmarsch & Comp.), Vienna 1858, p. 127 ( digitized version ).
  • Cyriak Bodenstein: One Hundred Years of Art History in Vienna 1788–1888. A ceremony on the occasion of the Säcular celebration of the Pension Society of Visual Artists Vienna. Vienna: Gerold 1888
  • Rudolf Schmidt: Austrian artist lexicon. From the beginning to the present. Vienna: Tusch 1974–1980
  • Ulrich Thieme / Felix Becker [ed.]: General lexicon of visual artists from antiquity to the present. 37 volumes. Leipzig: Engelmann 1907–1950
  • Hans Tietze: The monuments of the city of Vienna (XI. - XXI. District). Vienna: Schroll 1908 (Österreichische Kunsttopographie, 2), p. 237
  • Walter Wagner: History of the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. Vienna: Rosenbaum 1967 (publications by the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, new series 1)
  • Felix Czeike: I. Inner City. Vienna [u. a.]: Jugend & Volk 1983 (Wiener Bezirkskulturführer, 1), p. 8
  • Justus Schmidt / Hans Tietze: Dehio Vienna. Vienna: A. Schroll 1954 (Bundesdenkmalamt: Die Kunstdenkmäler Österreichs), p. 26
  • Paul Kortz: Vienna at the beginning of the 20th century. A guide in a technical and artistic direction. Edited by the Austrian Association of Engineers and Architects. Volume 2. Vienna: Gerlach & Wiedling 1906, p. 59