Raimund Mosler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Raimund Mosler (born January 4, 1886 in Katharein ( Kateřinky ) near Troppau , Austro-Hungarian Monarchy , † January 15, 1959 in Wiera (Schwalmstadt) ) was a German painter .

Life

Mosler studied painting at the Vienna Art Academy , from which he graduated with the title "Academic Painter". During the First World War he was taken prisoner by Russia, where he also made small sketches and paintings. In the Krasnoyarsk camp , he presumably took over the drawing course initiated by Alexander Drobik in 1917.

After his return in 1920 he processed his war experiences in works such as death news or patrol ride . Mosler exhibited regularly with German-Bohemian colleagues. In 1923, together with the sculptor Engelbert Kaps, he founded the “Association of Fine Artists Silesia”, which was supported by EW Braun , the director of the Opava State Museum , among others . In 1925 he became a member of the Association of German Visual Artists in the Czechoslovak Republic "Kunstring" in Mährisch Ostrau .

In 1945 Mosler lost his entire existence when he was expelled from Moravian Silesia . In 1946, he was transported to the north Hessian town of Wiera near Treysa on a transport for refugees. There he married a second time; the marriage had a daughter.

Individual evidence

  1. Informační systém abART - osoba: Mosler Raimund. Retrieved October 25, 2019 .
  2. a b Search for traces in the Schwalm: people from Schwalmstadt conduct research on the painter Raimund Mosler. September 11, 2019, accessed October 25, 2019 .
  3. a b Lena Radauer: "This is how I found out firsthand that art can not only comfort (...) but liberate" . In: To Siberia! German-Bohemian visual artists in World War I on the Eastern Front and in Siberian captivity ed. Anna Habánová . 2016 ( academia.edu [accessed October 26, 2019]).