Sebastian property damage

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Sebastian Habenschaden, drawn by Louis Lang (attributed to), Rome 1841

Sebastian Habenschaden (* 1813 in Munich ; † May 7, 1868 there ) was a German painter , etcher and modeller.

Life

Happy homecoming by Sebastian Habenschaden, 1837
Grave of Sebastian Habenschaden on the old southern cemetery in Munich location
The bronze bust modeled by the sculptor Michael Wagmüller on Habenschaden's tombstone

Sebastian Habenschaden learned from the porcelain painter Adler / Adam. He then attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich , where he failed, however, whereupon he mainly turned to the creation of animal sculptures in addition to animal and landscape painting. In modeling, property damage was already considered more talented than in painting during his lifetime.

Drawings, paintings and etchings of damaged belongings can be found in the Philadelphia Museum of Art , the British Museum , exhibitions on landscape and animal painting and the Georg Schäfer Museum .

Sculptures from Habenschaden are still traded today by international auction houses. Some pieces can also be found in the Munich Porcelain Museum .

The Habenschadenstrasse in Pullach was named after him, where, years after his death, Munich artists celebrated his memory every year with a festival. Habenschaden's grave is located in the Old Southern Cemetery in Munich (Gräberfeld 17 - Row 2 - Place 22/23) location .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hyacinth Holland:  Habenschaden, Sebastian . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 10, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1879, p. 266 f.
  2. a b Aenne Atzenbeck: The local history of the municipality of Pullach in the Isar valley from its beginnings to the turn of the century , p. 144 (edition from 1956)
  3. ^ Fr. Pecht: Geschichte der Münchner Kunst (1888), p. 170 Quoted from Georg, Hager: 'The Christmas crib - A contribution to folklore and art history from the Bavarian National Museum'
  4. Philadelphia Museum of Art website
  5. ^ Website of the British Museum
  6. ^ Hohenkarpfen Art Foundation
  7. ^ Website of the Museum Georg Schäfer -> The Museum -> Represented Artists
  8. Georg, Hager: 'The Christmas Crib - A Contribution to Folklore and Art History from the Bavarian National Museum'