Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Friedrich Reusch

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Friedrich Reusch


Friedrich Reusch Friedrich Reusch Works on Sale at Auction Biography

Died
  
October 15, 1906, Agrigento, Italy

Johann Friedrich Reusch (born 5 September 1843 in Siegen; died 15 October 1906 in Agrigento) was a German sculptor.

Friedrich Reusch Friedrich Reusch Works on Sale at Auction Biography

Biography

Friedrich Reusch Friedrich Reusch Works on Sale at Auction Biography

He studied at the Prussian Academy of Arts and under Albert Wolff, whom he assisted on the equestrian monument to Frederick William III. After his return to Berlin from a visit to Italy in 1874, he fashioned the marble group of “Market-Traffic” (German: Marktverkehr, 1879, now lost) for the Belle-Alliance Bridge (now the Halle-Gate Bridge), and the “Genius of Steam” (German: Der Dämon des Dampfes, 1880) for the Technical Academy at Charlottenburg.

Friedrich Reusch Friedrich Johann Reusch

He was appointed professor at the Königsberg Art Academy in 1881. In Königsberg, he executed the large group of “Strength, Justice, and Moderation” for the government building, the statues of “Albert, First Duke of Prussia” (1891), and of Emperor William I (1894), both outside the royal palace, besides several other memorials, many busts and decorative figures for public buildings.

At Siegen are a “Soldiers' Monument” (1877), the equestrian statue of “William I” (1892), and a bronze statue of “Bismarck” (1900), and there are also several mythological genre groups to his credit.

References

Friedrich Reusch Wikipedia