Anna Rosina de Gasc explained

Anna Rosina de Gasc
Birth Name:Anna Rosina Lisiewska
Birth Date:10 July 1713
Birth Place:Berlin
Death Place:Dresden
Nationality:German
Field:Painting
Training:Georg Lisiewski (her father)
Antoine Pesne

Anna Rosina de Gasc (born: Anna Rosina Lisiewska) (10 July 1713  - 26 March 1783) was a German portrait painter.

Early life

Anna Rosina was born into a family of painters of Polish noble origin in Berlin.[1] Her mother was Maria Elizabeth Kahl from Pomerania. Her father, Georg Lisiewski (1674–1751), taught painting to Rosina and her siblings Anna Dorothea (1721–1782) and Christoph Friedrich (1725–1794). She later studied with the painter Antoine Pesne and learned his style of painting.

Career

In 1757, Rosina was appointed as court painter by Frederick Augustus of Anhalt-Zerbst. During her ten-year stay at the court, she painted a gallery of forty ladies. Later, she moved to the ducal court in Brunswick, where she received a generous grant from Duchess Philippine Charlotte of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

Her work is held in the permanent collections of several museums worldwide, including the Kunsthistorisches Museum,[2] the University of Michigan Museum of Art,[3] and the National Museum, Warsaw.[4]

Later life

In 1741, Anna Rosina married the Prussian court painter David Matthieu (1697–1756) and became the stepmother of Georg David Matthieu. After David's death, she married in 1760 to Louis de Gasc, who was a friend of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing. She had two children with him.

Anna Rosina de Gasc died in 1783 in Dresden.

Honors

References

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=LJ8wAAAAYAAJ&dq=Friedericke+Julie+Lisiewski&pg=RA1-PA65 Leopold von Zedlitz: Lisiewski in: Neues preussisches Adels-Lexicon, oder, Genealogische und diplomatische Nachrichten (1836–1843), vol. 6, Supplement, Gebrüder Reichenbach, 1839
  2. Web site: Therese Natalie (1728-1778) von Braunschweig - Wolfenbüttel als Äbtissin von Gandersheim, Kniestück. 2021-03-26. www.khm.at. de.
  3. Web site: Exchange: Portrait of a Lady. 2021-03-26. exchange.umma.umich.edu.
  4. Web site: Portrait of a lady.