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Gottfried Lindauer

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Name
  
Gottfried Lindauer


Role
  
Artist

Gottfried Lindauer The Art of Gottfried Lindauer Home Birth Aotearoa Magazine

Born
  
5 January 1839 (
1839-01-05
)
Pilsen, Bohemia, now the Czech Republic

Died
  
June 13, 1926, Woodville, New Zealand

Education
  
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna

Artwork
  
Ana Rupene and child, Mr Paramena, Hinepare

Gottfried lindauer 1839 1926 pilsen painter of the new zealand m ori


Gottfried Lindauer, (5 January 1839 – 13 June 1926) was a Bohemian and later a New Zealand artist famous for his portraits, including many of Māori people.

Contents

Gottfried Lindauer Tamati Waka Nene by Gottfried Lindauer

Gottfried lindauer die m ori portraits ausstellung in der alten nationalgalerie berlin


Czech life and Austrian school

Gottfried Lindauer httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22

He was born Bohumír Lindauer in Plzeň (Pilsen), Western Bohemia, Austrian Empire (now part of the Czech Republic) His father Ignatz Lindauer was a gardener. His first drawing experience were plants and trees. From 1855 Lindauer studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, where he took classes of Leopold Kupelwieser, Josef Führich and Professor Rohl. To increase his chances on the market, he decided to change his name from the Czech Bohumír to the German translation of his name "Gottfried". From his studio in Pilsen he created paintings with religious themes for churches and painting frescoes in the Cathedral churches of Austria. His paintings attracted people, particularly the prominent people who were often the subjects of his paintings, including Bishop Jieschek, of Budweis, in Bohemia. After a sojourn in that city of eighteen months, he went to Moravia for three years.

New Zealand

Gottfried Lindauer The Materials and Techniques of Gottfried Lindauer

To avoid being drafted to the Austrian military service he left for Germany and in 1874 boarded a boat to New Zealand. Many prominent Māori chiefs commissioned his work, which accurately records their facial tattoos, clothing, ornaments and weapons. A series of life-size portraits of Maori chiefs and warriors exhibited by Sir Walter Buller at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition, 1886, were all from Lindauer's hand, who had made the "Maori at home" a subject of special study. Lindauer's Maori paintings are, like many by Ellen von Meyern and Frances Hodgkins, associated with symbolist portraits of demure females with or without a child. One of these, a young Poi dancer without a facial tattoo, was so admired by the Prince of Wales that Buller gifted it to him. After visiting his native land in 1886-87, he settled down at Woodville, near Wellington, having shortly before married Rebecca, the daughter of Benjamin Prance Petty. Lindauer died in 1926 and is buried in the Old Gorge cemetery in Woodville.

Gottfried Lindauer The Art of Gottfried Lindauer Home Birth Aotearoa Magazine

  • Lindauer, the #1 New Zealand sparkling wine brand, is named after the artist.
  • See also C. F. Goldie, another artist known for Maori portraits.
  • Lindauer's portrait of Paratene Te Manu is on the cover of the novel Rangatira by Paula Morris. The novel features a number of fictionalized scenes with Lindauer and Paratene, set during the painting of the portrait in 1886.
  • Lindauer's son taught art at Woodville School in the 1920s.

  • Gottfried Lindauer Photography and the Portraits of Gottfried Lindauer

    Gottfried Lindauer Gottfried Lindauer Verein der Freunde der Nationalgalerie

    References

    Gottfried Lindauer Wikipedia