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Karl Friedrich Lippmann (also "Carl Fr. Lippmann" and "FK Lippmann"; 27 October 1883, in Offenbach am Main – 30 May 1957) was a German painter of the New Objectivity, known for landscapes and portraits. == Life == Karl Friedrich Lippmann was of the three children of the painter, lithographer and print shop owner Johann Lippmann (1858 *, † 1933) and his wife, Frieda Schoembs. He studied at the Technical School (today Hochschule für Gestaltung Offenbach) 1900-02 and then at the School of the Museum of Decorative Arts in Berlin (the school merged later with Berlin University of the Arts). After his military service he continued his studies for three years at the private academy of Anton Ažbe in Munich, then he spend a year the Städelschule in Frankfurt (1906–07) and a year in the private school of Professor Julius Exter in Munich. There he fell in love with Martina Ruch, whom he later married, they had four children, of which his daughter also studied art In Offenbach, he lived at Buchrainweg, No. 161. His large studio was located in the Deutschherrenhaus in Frankfurt on the river Main. After the destruction of his studio during WWII he moved to Eichstätt in Bavaria to save the life of his children. Eichstätt was the home town of his second wife, Berta Bahrer. His studio was located in the Crown Tower near the Cathedral square. To come back to Offenbach, the art patron Dr. Jean Rill gave him an apartment in the Tulpenhofstr. in Westend. Two years after his return he died unexpectedly. He was buried in the Old Cemetery in Offenbach next to his father. His second wife was still alive until 1980 and is also buried there. The ''Lippmann street'' in Darmstadt since 1959, remembers to his father and him. 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「Karl Friedrich Lippmann」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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