Antonia Wallinger Explained

Antonia Wallinger (née von Ott; 7 April 1823, Munich - 24 March 1893) was a Munich royal court theater dancer whose portrait was included in the famous Gallery of Beauties of the Bavarian King Ludwig I.[1]

Life

Antonia Wallinger was born in 1823 at Munich, the daughter of the merchant Anton Josef Wallinger, later a court theater economist, and his wife Katharina, née Bayer.[2]

Portrait

In 1840, Ludwig I commissioned Joseph Stieler to paint her portraits for the Gallery of Beauties (today in Nymphenburg Palace). She is portrayed as Hebe, the Goddess of Youth and was described by King Ludwig I in his sonnet "Ode to the Hebe in My Collection of Beauties" as "a sweet cupbearer at a feast of the gods".[3]

Personal life

Around 1860 she married Friedrich von Ott, a government councilor. Her husband died around 1880. Thirteen years later she died in 1893.[4]

Notes and References

  1. S. K. Ludovic, "A King's Gallery of Beauty" Strand Magazine (January 1902): 16-23.
  2. HAUS DER BAYERISCHEN GESCHICHTE, https://hdbg.eu/koenigreich/index.php/objekte/index/id/886
  3. Flickr, https://www.flickr.com/photos/1way/713081196
  4. Антония, Розали и Катарина. Три красавицы из галереи Людвига l, https://dzen.ru/a/Y9ukZuYBew2M2WHU