Christa Zaat
Kathe Schmidt Kollwitz (German artist) 1867 - 1945
Selbstbildnis, 1906
colour lithograph
41.2 x 31.8 cm. (16.22 x 12.52 in.)
Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Germany
Kathe Kollwitz (née Schmidt) was a German printmaker and sculptor, whose major themes were poverty, injustice and suffering. She received her first art tuition from Rudolph Mauer (1845–1905) in Königsberg in 1881. She continued her training in 1885 in Berlin under Karl Stauffer-Bern and in 1888 under Ludwig Herterich (1856–1932) in Munich. Influenced by the prints of Max Klinger, which had been brought to her attention by Stauffer-Bern, she devoted herself to this form and gave up painting after 1890. She first produced etchings and lithographs but later also woodcuts. From 1891 she lived in Berlin where she had her first success: the portfolio of three lithographs and three etchings, A Weavers’ Revolt (1895–8; Washington, DC, N.G.A.), inspired by Gerhard Hauptmann’s play Die Weber, was shown at the Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung. Kollwitz joined the Secession in Berlin and was appointed to a special teaching post at the Künstlerinnenschule.
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*NYC union leader says members support Trump over Biden 3-to-1: 'I see a
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