Paul Hubrich

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Paul Hubrich (born November 9, 1869 in Gebhardsdorf , Lauban district , province of Silesia ; † June 5, 1948 in Berlin ) was a German sculptor .

Live and act

Hubrich was a student at the Berlin School of Applied Arts and especially from Karl Ludwig Manzel . He then worked as a freelance sculptor in Berlin. His studio was in Berlin-Friedenau . From 1904 to 1910 he was represented with genre statues and busts at the Great Berlin Art Exhibition. His special achievement consists in the extensive design of the Christ monument designed by Manzel in the south-west cemetery in Stahnsdorf (1909–1911).

His final resting place is in the south-west cemetery Stahnsdorf.

Works

  • Copy of Venus (by Jean-Baptiste Pigalle ) in the French. Roundabout of figures in Sanssouci Park in Potsdam (1904). After severe weather damage to the Hubrich copy, a new copy by the Potsdam sculptor Rudolf Böhm was installed in 2010 .
  • Copy of the Paris sculpture (by August Wredow ) on Rosenhag in Brandenburg (1912)
  • Mourning Mary at the Skaba Tomb in the Stahnsdorf Southwest Cemetery (1912)
  • Expressionist shell limestone monument on the Charlotte Birnbaum grave in the Stahnsdorf south-west cemetery (1930)
  • Marble sculpture Ganymede in the Marienberg park in Brandenburg
  • Marble sculpture David on the Seefeld grave in the Stahnsdorf south-west cemetery (from the estate)

literature

  • Dressler's art manual , 1921, II.
  • Thieme-Becker : General Lexicon of Fine Arts (Volume 18), Leipzig 1992, p. 29

Individual evidence

  1. Photographs in the picture index of art and architecture
  2. Günter Schenke: The superstars from Sanssouci are back . In: Potsdam Latest News, July 3, 2010.