Gottlieb Schick

Heinrike Dannecker (1802), oil on canvas, 119 x 100 cm. Berlin, Alte Nationalgalerie

Christian Gottlieb Schick (15 August 1776 – 7 May 1812) was a German Neoclassical painter. His history paintings, portraits, and landscapes are characterized by romantic tendencies. Of these, he is best known for his portraits.

He was born in Stuttgart. He studied from 1795 to 1797 at the Hohe Karlsschule under Philipp Friedrich von Hetsch, a follower of Jacques-Louis David.[1] In 1797–98 he studied under Johann Heinrich von Dannecker, then relocated to Paris where he spent 1799 to 1802 in the studio of David.[1] Between 1802 and 1811 he stayed in Rome, and became an important figure in that city's artistic life.[1] In Schick's last years, his style of Raphaelesque classicism gradually acquired a romantic orientation.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Bernardini, Ingrid Sattel. "Schick, Gottlieb". Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 31 Dec. 2014.

References

  • Wintterlin (1890), "Schick, Gottlieb", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), 31, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 161–166
  • Simon, Karl: "Ph. Fr. Hetsch u. Gottlieb Schick in ihren persönl. Beziehungen." in: Württ. Vierteljahresschr. f. Landesgeschichte, ed. 20-21, 1911, p. 161 ff.
  • Von Holst, Christian (Ed.): Schwäbischer Klassizismus zwischen Ideal und Wirklichkeit 1770-1830. Stuttgart, 1993. ISBN 3-7757-0418-3
  • Gottlieb Schick. Ein Maler des Klassizismus. Ed. Ulrike Gauß & Christian von Holst. (Exhibit Catalog). Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Stuttgart, 1976.
  • Bernardini, Ingrid Sattel. "Schick, Gottlieb". In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, (accessed 30 December 2011; subscription required).

External links



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