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Josef Eduard Teltscher

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Nationality
  
Austrian

Period
  
Romanticism

Name
  
Josef Teltscher

Movement
  
Romanticism

Known for
  
Painting


Josef Eduard Teltscher

Full Name
  
Josef Eduard Teltscher

Born
  
January 15, 1801 (
1801-01-15
)
Prague, Bohemia

Notable work
  
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) on his deathbed, 28 March 1827.

Died
  
July 7, 1837, Piraeus, Greece

Education
  
Academy of Fine Arts Vienna

Josef Eduard Teltscher, born 15 January 1801 in Prague, Bohemia, was an Austrian painter and lithographer. He was one of the best Viennese portrait lithographers and watercolourists of the first half of the nineteenth century in Central Europe, and as a miniaturist, according to his contemporaries, he was an no less than Moritz Daffinger himself.

Contents

Life

Teltscher began his apprendiship in lithography in (Brno) and then from 1823 he was a student at the Vienna Academy. He was one of the first and most outstanding portrait lithographers in Vienna of the Biedermeier period and already had dealt with this new technology even before Josef Kriehuber. From 1829 to 1832, he had a very fruitful and successful period in Graz.

He was close to Franz Schubert and his circle of friends and created the most authentic portraits of the master. Also, he was with Ludwig van Beethoven on his deathbed. These blades were, as described in Die Welt von Gestern, owned by Stefan Zweig, but that are property of the British Library today. On 7 July 1837, Teltscher drowned on a study trip in the port of Piraeus near Athens, Greece.

References

Attribution
  • This article is based on the translation of the corresponding article on the German Wikipedia. A list of contributors can be found there at the History section.
  • Further reading

  • Teltscher, Josef Eduard. In Constantin von Wurzbach, Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich, 43. Band, S. 268, Wien 1881 (in German)
  • References

    Josef Eduard Teltscher Wikipedia


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