Julius Weyde

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Eduard Ludwig Julius Theodor Weyde (born January 4, 1822 in Berlin , † February 27, 1860 in Stettin ) was a German genre , landscape and portrait painter .

Life

Weyde studied between 1835 and 1840/41 at the Royal Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin in the studio of the sculptor Albert Wolff . From 1843 to 1847 he went on study trips to Dresden, Munich, Venice and Antwerp.

From 1847 he continued his studies in Karel Ferdinand Venneman's studio in Antwerp. In 1847/48 Weyde became a student of Paul Delaroche and Horace Vernet in Paris . Then he returned to Berlin.

In the 1850s he went on several study trips, including a. in the Salzburg Alps (1850), to Austria and Italy (1853) and to Pula in Istria . Along with August Haun published Weyde then his most famous work, the Scenic [n] views of Roman monuments to Pola in Istria (1855).

literature

  • Lisa Hackmann: Weyde, Julius , in: Bénédicte Savoy, France Nerlich (Ed.): Paris apprenticeship years. A lexicon for training German painters in the French capital. Volume 2: 1844-1870 , de Gruyter, Berlin / Boston 2015, ISBN 978-3-11-035006-7 , p.
  • Hermann Arthur Lier:  Weyde, Julius . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 42, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1897, p. 266.

Individual evidence

  1. Baptismal register of the Domgemeinde Berlin, No. 18/1822
  2. Berlin, Prussian Academy of the Arts 0417, reports on the students of the 2nd drawing class, 1818–1845, fol. 215, 219, 225, 230, 236; PrAdk 0416, report on the students of the first drawing class, 1797–1857, fol. 161, 164; PrAdK 0420, reports on the students of the plaster drawing class, the ornament class, the Eleven Institute, 1812–1868, fol. 95.