Zenta Zizler

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Zenta Zizler , married Zenta Vogl-Zizler (born July 16, 1909 in Fürth ; † December 13, 2010 ), was a German sculptor .

Life

Zenta Zizler was a daughter of the Mannheim City Planning Director Josef Zizler and grew up in Mannheim, where she attended the Liselotte-Gymnasium from 1921 to 1926 . She studied in Munich with Professors Emil Preetorius and Richard Klein and belonged to the first stage design class in Germany, but then turned to sculpture.

In 1943 she married the sculptor Hans Vogl . The couple moved into a studio at Künstlerhof 17 in Neuhausen in 1947 . In the same year the son Michael Vogl was born. The grandchildren Fabian and Severin were born in 1978 and 1982 and, like their parents and grandparents, are artistic. Severin Vogl shot the film Atelier Visits in the Künstlerhof , in which he portrayed his grandmother. An exhibition about the Vogl-Zizler family of artists took place in the Pasing town hall in 2009.

Works

Part of the Carl Theodor relief railing can be seen above the shop.

Josef Zizler had buildings P 5 and P 6 built in Mannheim city center between 1932 and 1937. For the balcony railing of P 5 in the Mannheimer Planken , Zenta Zizler designed a relief that shows Elector Carl Theodor on the hunt. Zizler's template was implemented by the blacksmiths Karl and Friedrich Guiege. The P 5 building once housed the Koschenhassen dance café, which opened in 1936. The building with the Zizler balcony relief is a listed building .

Zenta Zizler's bronze figure of a girl with a branch is in Nördliche Auffahrtsallee 32 in Nymphenburg , and her flora is on the Nymphenburg Canal . The four elements on the facade of the Deutsches Museum and the Holy Winthir at the entrance to the Winthir School were designed by Zenta Zizler and her husband. The school was inaugurated in 1912 and at that time it was decorated with a stone representation of Winthir, the local patron of Neuhausen. The bronze statue designed by Zenta Zizler and Hans Vogl was added in 1984.

Her sculpture Schäfer , which was created around 1970, stands in front of the back entrance of the Perlach secondary school at Albert-Schweitzer-Straße 59 . This work of art reminds us that the area there was used as pastureland before the construction of the satellite town of Neuperlach . Zenta Zizler furnished the playground of another school, the Walliser Straße elementary school, completed in 1963 and now renamed Middle School Munich, Walliser Straße 5, with a bronze sculpture depicting the Gänseliesel .

Zenta Zizler took part in the Great Art Exhibition in Munich in 1956. She was a member of GEDOK , the Fédération Internationale Culturelle Féminine Paris and the working group 68 in Wasserburg am Inn .

Zenta Zizler, who mainly created small sculptures and mainly dealt with the human figure, was still active as an artist at the age of 100. She spent the last years of her life in the Münchenstift and died at the age of 101. She was buried in the Perlacher Forst cemetery in Munich.

Web links

Commons : Zenta Zizler  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Zenta Vogl-Zizler, Schäfer (around 1970) , on: http://kunst.hachinger-bach.de
  2. a b Congratulations to Zenta Vogl! , July 22nd, 2010 on www.hallo-muenchen.de ( Memento of the original from March 4th, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.hallo-muenchen.de
  3. a b c Martha Schad: Women in bronze and stone - Munich . Stiebner Verlag GmbH, 2008, ISBN 978-3-8307-1043-1 , p. 123.
  4. a b c 3 generations - Vogl family of artists , on: www.kulturforum-mwest.de
  5. Tanja Vogel, Stone Horse Pictures in the Square City of Mannheim , in: Alfred Wieczorek and Michael Tellenbach (eds.), Horsepower. The horse moves humanity , Reiss-Engelhorn-Museum Mannheim 2007 (= publications of the Reiss-Engelhorn-Museums 23), p. 153–156, here p. 154
  6. Susanne Räuchle, In Search of Cultural Monuments , in: Mannheimer Morgen , March 17, 2012 ( online )
  7. ^ History of the Winthir School , at: www.gswinthir.musin.de
  8. A short history of our school , on: www.mswalliser.musin.de
  9. ↑ Obituary notice from December 15, 2010 in the Süddeutsche Zeitung ( online )