Hellmut Eichrodt Explained

Hellmut Eichrodt (27 February 1872, Bruchsal - 31 July 1943, Karlsruhe) was a German painter and graphic artist.

Biography

Hellmut Eichrodt, younger brother of Otto Eichrodt, studied from 1890 to 1903 at the Karlsruher Kunstakademie and was apprenticed with Hans Thoma and Leopold Graf von Kalckreuth. From 1897 to 1912 he worked at the magazine Jugend, and for Simplicissimus. Besides his graphic art, he painted murals in churches and other public buildings, including one for the mausoleum in Addis Abeba of Ethiopian emperor Menelik II, and multiple murals in the Karlsruher Christuskirche.[1]

In the holdings of the Karlsruher Kunsthalle are two women's portraits by Eichrodt. Because of his collaboration with the Kunstdruckerei Künstlerbund Karlsruhe he received a number of commissions for advertisements, and designed posters for a number of companies including Brauerei Ketterer, Kast & Ehinger, Badische Feuerversicherungsbank, and the Norddeutscher Lloyd. For Friedrich Dreser he created collections of images, Der Froschkönig, Der Soldat (1908) and Die sieben Raben (1909). He signed his collection with "H-E".[2] In 1918 he illustrated the call to the soldiers of the Grand Duchy of Baden to lay down their arms and return home.[3]

Literature

Notes and References

  1. Stadt Karlsruhe (ed): Straßennamen in Karlsruhe (= Karlsruher Beiträge. Nr. 7). Karlsruhe 1994, (online).
  2. Detlef Lorenz, Reklamekunst um 1900. Künstlerlexikon für Sammelbilder, Reimer 2000,, S. 91
  3. Aufruf der vorläufigen Volksregierung an die badischen Soldaten, 16. November 1918 (Staatsarchiv Freiburg, W 110/1 Nr. 108), Abbildung