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・ Bruno Orsoni
・ Bruno Oscar Schmidt
・ Bruno Osimo
・ Bruno Padulazzi
・ Bruno Paes
・ Bruno Paillard
・ Bruno Pais
・ Bruno Paixão
・ Bruno Palli
・ Bruno Parisi
・ Bruno Parma
・ Bruno Parovel
・ Bruno Pascua
・ Bruno Pasquini
・ Bruno Patacas
Bruno Paul
・ Bruno Pauletto
・ Bruno Paulista
・ Bruno Paulo Machado Barbosa
・ Bruno Peinado
・ Bruno Pelissari
・ Bruno Pelletier
・ Bruno Pellizzari
・ Bruno Peltre
・ Bruno Pereira Mendes
・ Bruno Pereirinha
・ Bruno Peres
・ Bruno Perone
・ Bruno Perreau
・ Bruno Pesaola


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Bruno Paul : ウィキペディア英語版
Bruno Paul

Bruno Paul (19 January 1874 – 17 August 1968) was a German architect, illustrator, interior designer, and furniture designer.
== Early career ==

Paul was born in Seifhennersdorf, a village in rural Saxony, in 1874. His father was an independent tradesman, craftsman, and dealer in building materials. At twelve years old Paul left Seifhennersdorf for Dresden, where he briefly attended Gymnasium before entering a teacher’s training school. By 1892 he was determined to pursue a career in the arts. In 1893 he was accepted as a student at the Saxon Academy of Fine Arts.
In 1894, Paul moved to Munich, then the artistic capital of Wilhelmine Germany. He enrolled at the Munich Academy as a student of the painter Paul Hoecker, one of the founding members of the Munich Secession. Hoecker provided Paul’s introduction to the city’s circle of progressive artists, which included his classmates Reinhold Max Eichler, Max Feldbauer, Walter Georgi, Angelo Jank, Walter Püttner, Leo Putz, Ferdinand von Rezniçek and Walter Schulz. In 1896, Paul left the Academy to begin an independent career. After working briefly as a studio painter, he won lasting renown as an illustrator. He was a regular contributor to ''Jugend'', the magazine from which the Jugendstil, the German counterpart to the French and Belgian Art Nouveau, derived its name. The leading figures of this movement, including Peter Behrens, Bernhard Pankok, and Richard Riemerschmid, as well as the majority of the founding members of the Munich Secession, all provided illustrations to ''Jugend''. After 1897, Paul joined the staff of the satirical magazine ''Simplicissimus''. Paul's weekly contributions to Simplicissimus between 1897 and 1906 won him international acclaim.

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