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Berta Zuckerkandl

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Name
  
Berta Zuckerkandl

Role
  
Writer

Parents
  
Moritz Szeps


Berta Zuckerkandl ZuckerkandlSzeps Berta Historische Bilder IMAGNO


Died
  
October 16, 1945, Paris, France

Similar People
  
Gustav Mahler, Irina Wanka, Johanna Orsini‑Rosenberg

Berta zuckerkandl


Berta Zuckerkandl-Szeps, born Bertha Szeps (13 April 1864, Vienna – 16 October 1945, Paris) was an Austrian writer, journalist, and critic.

Contents

Bertha Szeps was the daughter of Galician Jewish liberal newspaper publisher Moritz Szeps and was raised in Vienna. She was married to the Hungarian anatomist Emil Zuckerkandl.

Berta Zuckerkandl MONO VERLAG

From end of the 19th century until 1938, she led an important literary salon in Vienna, originally from a villa in Döbling, later in the Oppolzergasse near the Burgtheater. Many famous Viennese artists and personalities including Gustav Klimt, Gustav Mahler, Max Reinhardt, Arthur Schnitzler and others frequented the salon. Protégés of the salon include Anton Kolig and Sebastian Isepp of the Nötsch Circle. Her sister Sophie (1862–1937) was married to Paul Clemenceau, the brother of the French President Georges Clemenceau, and, therefore, she also had good ties to Parisian artistic circles. She translated a number of plays from French to German and was a cofounder of the Salzburg Music Festival.

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In 1938, she emigrated to Paris and later to Algiers. She returned in 1945 to Paris and died there the same year. She is buried at the Père Lachaise Cemetery.

Berta Zuckerkandl Berta Zuckerkandl Wikipedia

Works

Berta Zuckerkandl KunstSpielerei

  • Die Pflege der Kunst in Österreich 1848–1898.
  • Dekorative Kunst und Kunstgewerbe. Wien, 1900
  • Zeitkunst Wien 1901–1907. Hugo Heller, Wien, 1908
  • Ich erlebte 50 Jahre Weltgeschichte. Bermann-Fischer Verlag, Stockholm, 1939
  • Clemenceau tel que je l'ai connu. Algier, 1944
  • Österreich intim. Erinnerungen 1892–1942. Propyläen, Frankfurt/Main, 1970 (paperback edition: Ullstein, Frankfurt am Main, 1988; ISBN 3-548-20985-8)
  • Im salon von berta zuckerkandl flugel kawai



    Berta Zuckerkandl KunstSpielerei

    References

    Berta Zuckerkandl Wikipedia