Ida Kerkovius Explained

Ida Kerkovius (1879–1970) was a Baltic German painter and weaver from Latvia.

Life

Kerkovius was one of twelve children born to an upper-class Baltic German family. She was taught piano at an all-girls secondary school before attending a private institution in Riga. In Riga, she studied at a private schol of art. There she came in contact with a student of Adolf Hölzel and grew to have an acute understanding of paint and colour. So she applied at art school von Adolf Hölzel, the Dachauer Malschule, in the nearby village of Dachau. There she soon became his master student, who then trained new students in Hölzel's teachings - e.g. also Johannes Itten and Willi Baumeister.

She became an assistant and theorist at the Königlich Württembergische Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Stuttgart (the Royal Academy of the Arts in the Kingdom of Württemberg) where she went together with Hölzel before losing her citizenship, and thus her place at the academy, during World War I. Kerkovius then taught foreign students in similar positions and registered at the Bauhaus between 1920 and 1923, where she eventually joined the weaving workshop. Her income between the wars came primarily from the weaving workshop and through the secret sale of Kerkovius’s art by art dealer Hanna Bekker vom Rath. Her studio in Stuttgart was bombed during World War II, destroying many of her existing paintings. After Worldwar II she undertook numerous journeys, especially to Italy, where wonderful pictures were taken. The number of national and international exhibitions grew significantly and many of her works can now be found in well-known museums. Especially the big retrospective 2001 in Regensburg and Riga. her hometown, which was also the European Capital of Culture at the time and was celebrating its 800th anniversary, should be highlighted hereShe received more and more honors. In 1954 she was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit by Federal President Theodor Heuss. In 1955 Ida Kerkovius received first prize in the exhibition "Ischia in the Pictures of German Painters". In 1958 she was awarded the title of professor by the federal state of Baden-Württemberg. She was later named a member of the artists’ guild of Esslingen am Neckar and was awarded first prize for work in the 1955 exhibition Ischia im Bilde deutscher Maler.[1] [2]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

Li

Group exhibitions

References

  1. Web site: art directory. ida-kerkovius.com. 2017-07-31.
  2. http://www.andreageyer.info/revolttheysaid/k.html www.andreageyer.info: "Revolt, They Said"