Wilhelm Hasemann

Wilhelm Hasemann
(mid 1880s?)
Gutach Family (c. 1900)

Wilhelm Hasemann (16 September 1850, Mühlberg - 28 November 1913, Gutach) was a German genre painter and illustrator.

Life and career

Hasemann was the only son of a mechanic and left school at the age of fifteen to work in his father's shop. After displaying some artistic talent, he went to study at the Prussian Academy of Arts, the Weimar Saxon-Grand Ducal Art School and the Academy of Fine Arts, Karlsruhe. In 1880, he visited the village of Gutach for the first time as part of an assignment to illustrate the novella "Lorle, die Frau Professorin" by Berthold Auerbach.[1] Later, he and his brother-in-law Curt Liebich would establish an artists' colony at Gutach. In 1898, he was named a Professor by Frederick I, Grand Duke of Baden.

Hasemenn's paintings focused on rural life, customs and traditional dress, and his works were widely reproduced as postcards and magazine illustrations. He often collaborated with the writer Heinrich Hansjakob, who lived nearby in Haslach. They shared an interest in preserving the culture of the Black Forest region.[2]

The primary and secondary schools in Gutach are named after him, as well as the art museum and the game preserve between Hausach and Schonach.[3]

References

  1. Ansgar Barth: Der Schwarzwaldmaler Wilhelm Hasemann. In: Der Schwarzwald 1/2013, ISSN 0944-4505, pp. 5–7
  2. Brigitte Heck: Ein Hut macht Karriere.. In: Badisches Landesmuseum Karlsruhe: Baden! 900 Jahre – Geschichten eines Landes. Info-Verlag, Karlsruhe 2012, ISBN 978-3-937345-56-7, pg.256 (Exhibition catalog)
  3. Kunstmuseum Hasemann-Liebich: Wilhelm Hasemann

Further reading

External links

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