Ulrich Hübner

Netzflicker bei Travemünde, 1905

Ulrich Hübner (17 June 1872 Berlin - 29 April 1932 Neubabelsberg) was a German painter.

He was born into a family of artists, his academic training he received in 1892 in Karlsruhe with Robert Poetzelberger, Gustav Schönleber, and Carlos Grethe. He then studied at the private art school in Munich Friedrich Fehr. In 1899, he was a member of the Berlin Secession, and in 1906 and 1907 was on the board.

In 1899, he won the prize for advertising designs for cooperative advertising by Ludwig and Otto Stollwerck Henkell.

He painted in Berlin, Havel, and in the summers in Hamburg, Lübeck, Rostock and Travemünde (where he had his principal residence from 1909 to 1912), and in particular, many harbor scenes.

He showed at Kunstverein in Hamburg in 1910.[1] Some of his works are in the Behnhaus Museum, in Lübeck, and Los Angeles County Museum of Art.[2]

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