Peter Schubart von Ehrenberg explained

Peter Schubart von Ehrenberg (born 1668) was a painter and stage designer active in Vienna in the early eighteenth century, and the son of the perspective painter Wilhelm Schubert van Ehrenberg.[1] His known works are ephemeral decorations for courtly celebrations, such as the temporary triumphal arches celebrating the ages of kings and emperors from Charlemagne to Charles VI of Austria (1701–2), and designs for engravings.[2] In 1711 he designed a castrum doloris that was erected in St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna for the funeral of Emperor Joseph I.[3]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.getty.edu/vow/ULANFullDisplay?find=Ehrenberg&role=&nation=&prev_page=1&subjectid=500087993 "Ehrenberg, Peter Schubert von" Getty Union List of Artist Names
  2. P. M. Daly and G. R. Dimler (1997), The Jesuit series, Corpus librorum emblematum, Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press: pp. 46; 64.
  3. Barbara Chabrowe, "On the Significance of Temporary Architecture," in The Burlington Magazine, vol. 116, No. 856. (Jul., 1974): p. 386 n. 4.