Max Lieberg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Max Lieberg (born July 22, 1856 in Wolfhagen , Electorate of Hesse ; † August 10, 1912 in Kassel or Cappel ) was a German history and genre painter from the Düsseldorf School .

Life

The entry of the emperor into Strasbourg after the parade , 1890

Lieberg, one of three sons of the Jewish merchant, entrepreneur and Messinghof owner Wolf Lieberg (1817–1889) and his wife Betty, née Hess (1824–1887), studied from 1873 at the Kassel Art Academy . In 1875 he moved to the Düsseldorf Art Academy . Until 1884 Andreas and Karl Müller , Heinrich Lauenstein , Peter Janssen the Elder , Julius Roeting and Eduard Gebhardt were his teachers there. From 1890 he lived in Kassel- Bettenhausen and set up his studio on the first floor of the Messinghof. With the history painting Dance of the Children of Israel around the Golden Calf , Lieberg received the Bose scholarship from the city of Kassel in 1891 . In Düsseldorf Lieberg was one of the members of the artists' association Malkasten .

He died mentally deranged.

Exhibitions

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Messinghof with the companies Lieberg & Co. and Metallwerke Imfeld & Co. , website in the portal uni-kassel.de , accessed on June 29, 2017
  2. See nos. 8620–8636 in the finding aid 212.01.04 Student lists of the Düsseldorf Art Academy , website in the archive.nrw.de portal ( North Rhine-Westphalia State Archive )
  3. Inventory list , website in the malkasten.org portal , accessed on June 29, 2017