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Alfred Lichtwark : ウィキペディア英語版 | Alfred Lichtwark
Alfred Lichtwark (November 14, 1852 - January 13, 1914) was a German art historian, museum curator, and art educator in Hamburg. He is one of the founders of museum education and the art education movement. == Background and career ==
Alfred Lichtwark was the son of Johann Karl Ernst Lichtwark, a miller who owned the Reitbrook Mill. From his father's first marriage he had three half-siblings. Alfred Lichtwark's mother Johanne Helene Henrietta (née Bach) (1829-1909) was believed to be a direct descendant of the composer Johann Sebastian Bach. Lichtwark had a happy childhood in the countryside with his siblings Hans and Marianne (1857-1930) until 1858, when his father was forced to sell the mill for financial reasons. The family moved to Hamburg where his father ran an inn which fared poorly, and the family lived in poverty. Lichtwark, who attended the civil school, proved to be very talented and versatile, helping students after school as an assistant teacher. In 1873 he took the ''Abitur'' at the ''Christianeum'' in Altona. A grant by Justus Brinckmann helped finance his studies in arts and education in Dresden, Leipzig, and Berlin. After finishing his studies he worked at several primary and civil schools in Berlin. Lichtwark was very disenchanted with the educational system that existed at that time in Imperial Germany, which led him to the idea of a new kind of school or pedagogy.
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