Toutes peintures ā l'huile d'Fritz von Uhde


ID Image Painting(From A to Z)    Details 
54301  
Fritz von Uhde, Bavarian Drummers
 
 Bavarian Drummers   mk235 1883 Oil on canvas
54300  
Fritz von Uhde, Big Sister
 
 Big Sister   mk235 1892 Oil on canvas 1885 48.5x33cm
70681  
Fritz von Uhde, Die grobe Schwester
 
 Die grobe Schwester   Medium Oil on canvas Dimensions 48,5 x 33 cm
54298  
Fritz von Uhde, Fish child in Zandvoot
 
 Fish child in Zandvoot   mk235 1882 Oil on canvas 60x80cm
38669  
Fritz von Uhde, Grace
 
 Grace   mk138 1885 Oil on canvas 130x165cm
34026  
Fritz von Uhde, In the Garden
 
 In the Garden   mk87 1906 Oil on canvas 70x100cm Mannheim,Stadtische Kunsthalle Mannheim
54325  
Fritz von Uhde, In the Garden
 
 In the Garden   mk235 1906 Oil on canvas 70x100cm
38668  
Fritz von Uhde, Little Heathland Princess
 
 Little Heathland Princess   mk138 1889 Oil on canvas 140x111cm
98049  
Fritz von Uhde, Old woman with a pitcher
 
 Old woman with a pitcher   second half of 19th century Medium oil on canvas Dimensions 61 x 49 cm cyf
54299  
Fritz von Uhde, Two daughters in the garden
 
 Two daughters in the garden   mk235 1892 Oil on canvas 1892 145.5x116.5cm

Fritz von Uhde
German, 1848-1911 was a German painter of genre and religious subjects. His style lay between Realism and .Uhde was born in Wolkenburg, Saxony. In 1866 he was admitted to the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden, but later that year he left his studies for military service, and from 1867 to 1877 he was a professor of horsemanship to the regiment of the assembled guard. He moved to Munich in 1877 to attend the Academy of Fine Arts. In Munich he particularly admired the Dutch old masters, and in 1879 he travelled to Paris where his studies of the Dutch painters continued under Mihely Munkecsy's supervision. In 1882 a journey to Holland brought about a change in his style, as he abandoned the dark chiaroscuro he had learned in Munich in favor of a colorism informed by the works of the French Impressionists. His work was often rejected by the official art criticism, and by the public, because his representations of ordinary scenes were considered vulagar or ugly. The critic Otto Julius Bierbaum was more sympathetic; in 1893, he wrote, "As a painter of children, for example, Uhde is extraordinarily distinguished. He does not depict them as sweetly as used to be popular; in other words not as amusing or charming dolls, but with extreme, very strict naturalness." In about 1890, Uhde became a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich.



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