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__NOTOC__ Ingeborg Hunzinger (3 February 1915, Berlin – 19 July 2009, Berlin) was a German sculptor. Hunzinger was born Ingeborg Franck to a Jewish mother. In 1932 Ingeborg joined the Communist Party. She began her studies in arts in 1935 and was master pupil of Ludwig Kasper in 1938/39. In 1939 the Nazis prevented her from studying further and she emigrated to Italy. There she met the German painter Helmut Ruhmer. In 1942 they had to return to Germany and had two children. However, because of Ingeborg's part-Jewish ancestry they were not allowed to marry. Ruhmer was killed in the last year of World War II and Ingeborg married Adolf Hunzinger in the mid-fifties, with whom she had her third child. After a divorce from Hunzinger she married the sculptor Robert Riehl in the mid-sixties. Hunzinger resumed her arts studies in East Berlin in the early fifties; she was a master pupil of Fritz Cremer and Gustav Seitz. She taught at the arts school in Berlin-Weißensee and worked from 1953 as free-lance artist. She joined later the Party of Democratic Socialism.〔("'Made to look silly and laughable'—the PDS in Germany reacts to the erection of a statue of Rosa Luxemburg" ) by Stefan Steinberg, World Socialist Web Site (27 January 1999)〕 Hunzinger was the grandmother of the writer Julia Franck. ==Selected works== File:Die Erde Hunzinger Berlin2007.jpg|''Die Erde'' (1974) File:Berlin Hunzinger.jpg|''The Sphinx'' (1975) File:Rosenstrasse.jpg|''Block of Women'' (erected 1995) — see: Rosenstrasse protest File:Karl Liebknecht ND1.JPG|''Karl Liebknecht'' (1998) File:Matthilde Jacob ND2.JPG|''Mathilde Jacob'' (1998) 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ingeborg Hunzinger」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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