Suzanne Eisendieck Explained

Suzanne Eisendieck
Birth Name:Suzanne Eisendick
Birth Date:1906 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Danzig (now Gdańsk Poland)
Death Place:Paris, France
Resting Place:Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris
Nationality:German
Field:Painting, drawing
Training:Berlin State Academy for Fine and Applied Arts
Movement:Post-Impressionism
Spouse:Dietz Edzard (1893–1963)

Suzanne Eisendieck (14 November 1906  — 15 June 1998)[1] was a German Post-Impressionist painter native of Danzig.

Biography

Suzanne Eisendieck was born at Holzraum Platz 2B in Danzig (now Gdańsk in Poland) to German parents Karl Eisendick and Anna Eisendick (née Klegus).[2]

At the age of 12, Suzanne Eisendieck became one of the youngest pupils of the painter Fritz August Pfuhle.[3] When she was 21, she went to study for three years at Berlin State Academy for Fine and Applied Arts, attending the class of Maximilian Klewer, and whilst there took part in an exhibition with over 1400 objects displayed in a group collection.[4] Only 9 were sold and 3 of these were her canvases. This successful show in Berlin enabled her later to travel to Paris, where she took residence in a tiny attic of Latin Quarters near the Place St. Michel and started painting.[5] It was a continuous financial struggle for Suzanne until one friend organised for Madame Zak to visit her small studio. She immediately purchased 6 of her paintings and put them in her gallery, Galerie Zak, at the Place Saint Germain des Près. There they were so much admired that she arranged for the first exhibition of Suzanne Eisendieck works. That was followed later by few others in the Leicester Galleries in London.[6] This was also the end of bitter hardship for young artist and the start of great success.

Artistically, her work was inspired by the French Impressionists and is in many private collections, mostly in America. The majority of her drawings are rapid chalk or pen sketches due to the high demand for new artworks. Suzanne Eisendieck painted uniquely using oil paint and occasionally pastels.

She became best of friends with Dietz Edzard. It was he who originally introduced Madame Zak to her art. They started painting so much alike that some had difficulty in telling their work apart.

In 1938 Suzanne Eisendieck and Dietz Edzard (1893–1963) got married.[7] They had two children whilst living in Paris, Christine Edzard-Goodwin (1945) married to Richard Goodwin (Sands Films, London) and Angélica Edzard-Károlyi (1947) married to Georges Károlyi, Hungarian ambassador to France (Joseph Károlyi Foundation, Hungary).

Suzanne Eisendieck died in Paris in 1998 and was buried in the Père Lachaise Cemetery.[8]

Exhibitions

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Allgemeies Künstler Lexicon", by K.G. Saur München Leipzig 2002
  2. "Adreßbuch für Danzig und Vororte" Pomeranian Digital Library
  3. "Fritz Pfuhle". Eun Maler aus Danzig by Eberhard Lutze; Holzner Verlag, Würzburg 1966
  4. Book: The London Studio. 12. 1936. W.E. Rudge. 135. Suzanne Eisendieck has had to win through bitter hardships. She left Danzig at an early age to study in one of the Berlin art schools. Here she received training for a period of two years, after which her ambition was naturally to gain the ....
  5. Book: Studio International. 112. 1936. National Magazine Company. 135–. ... She took up residence in a tiny attic in the Latin Quarter, near the Place St. Michel. Here she bravely ....
  6. Book: Briton Hadden. Time. 30. 1937. Time, Inc.. 41. Almost immediately the artist, 26-year-old, blonde Suzanne Eisendieck, became a ward of the Leicester Galleries, and a story straight out of La Vie de Boheme turned toward a happy ending. Suzanne Eisendieck was born in Danzig of Polish ....
  7. Book: Studio International. 153. 1957. Studio Trust. 145–. Maybe the serenity came of his setding in Paris where he met Suzanne Eisendieck, an exile from Danzig, who became his second wife. 'Fleurs et musique' was the tide of the exhibition which Dietz Edzard gave in London and subsequently at ....
  8. Book: Esther Ruelfs. Relang. Ulrich Pohlmann. Die elegante Welt der Regina Relang: mode- und reportagefotografien. 2005. Hatje Cantz. German. 978-3-7757-1588-1. 274.