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Hermine Stilke

Portrait of Hermine Stilke, engraving after a portrait painted jointly by Karl Ferdinand Sohn, Theodor Hildebrandt, and Karl Friedrich Lessing

Sophia Hermine Stilke, née Sophia Hermine Peipers (3 March 1804 in Eupen – 23 May 1869 in Berlin), was a German illustrator and painter of the Düsseldorf school.

Life

Sophia Hermine was the second child of Catharina Gertrudis, née Peltzer, and the dyer and knife maker Johann Peter Jacob Peipers. The couple's two sons and three daughters, who were born between 1802 and 1811, included the later landscape and vedute painter Friedrich Eugen Peipers.[1]  Hermine studied painting at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. After initially trying out history painting, she switched to painting flowers and arabesques, for which she was praised by the Blatter für literarischen entertainment in 1837 and by the art historian Georg Kaspar Nagler in 1847.[2][3]  On 18 January 1832 she married the history painter Hermann Stilke (1803-1860), a student of Peter von Cornelius. The couple's son was the later publisher Georg Stilke, born in 1840. She went to Berlin with her family in 1850, where she ran a private drawing school. One of her students was Marie Remy. Ernst Förster portrayed Hermine Stilke in pencil on paper in a hip portrait. The same praised her floral arabesques and border decorations in 1860 as stylish, important, and unsurpassed.  In 1848, 1856, and 1860, Stilke was at the art exhibitions of the Berlin Art Academy as well as 1867 and 1870 represented at those of the Verein der Berliner Künstlerinnen. Stilke's diary was published in Leipzig around 1890.

Works

In addition to watercolours, Hermine Stilke primarily created illustrations, initials, and other elements of decorative prints. Her works found their way into numerous albums, collections of poems, sayings and songs, travelogues, and luxury volumes as book decorations. They played an important role in the decorative arts of the 19th century. In many of her works, Stilke used the new medium of photography based on chromolithography. With Alwine Schroedter, wife of painter Adolf Schrödter, she is considered one of the most important German artists of the 19th century.

The following works show Stilke as an illustrator and author:

External links

Literature

Ballenstedt Castle, lithograph

References

  1. Sophia Hermina Peipers , website in the gedbas.genealogy.net portal, retrieved on 29 November 2014
  2. Leaves for Literary Entertainment , No. 133 of 13 May 1837, p. 538 ( online )
  3. ↑ Georg Kaspar Nagler : New general artist lexicon . Seventeenth volume, Verlag EA Fleischmann, Munich 1847, p. 361 ( online )
  4. ↑ According to other information, she married him in 1835. - Cf. Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie , volume 36, Bavarian Academy of Sciences, Duncker & Humblot, new edition 1971, volume 36, p. 240 ( online )
  5. ↑ Ernst Förster : History of German Art . Part Five: From 1820 to the Present . Publisher TD Weigel, Leipzig 1860, p. 305 ( online )
  6. ^ Athanasius Graf Raczynski : History of modern German art . First volume: Düsseldorf and the Rhineland , Berlin 1836, p. VIII ( online )
  7. ↑ Cf. Allgemeine Zeitung München , supplement to the Allgemeine Zeitung of 10 November 1864, No. 315, p. 5115 ( online )
  8. ↑ Cf. Allgemeine Zeitung München , supplement to the Allgemeine Zeitung of 11 December 1866, No. 345, p. 5679 ( online )
  9. ↑ Cf. Günter Häntzschel: Bibliography of the German-language poetry anthologies 1840-1914 , Verlag KG Saur, Munich 1991, ISBN 3-598-10838-9 p. 1356 ( online )
  10. ↑ Cf. General Bibliography for Germany , No. 46 of 18 November 1869, p. 467 ( online )
  1. ^ "Prepayment certificates website closed on 16 November". The Pharmaceutical Journal. 2014. doi:10.1211/pj.2014.20067137. ISSN 2053-6186.
  2. ^ "Trewin, Simon Courtenay, (born 24 May 1966), literary agent, since 1993; Head, London Office (Literary), and Partner, WME (William Morris Endeavour Entertainment Ltd), since 2012", Who's Who, Oxford University Press, 2015-12-01, doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u284252, retrieved 2022-07-04
  3. ^ "39301, 1879-05-08, FLEISCHMANN (E.A.), Munich". Art Sales Catalogues Online. doi:10.1163/2210-7886_asc-39301. Retrieved 2022-07-04.