Wilhelm Lindenschmit the Younger explained

Wilhelm Lindenschmit (the Younger) (June 20, 1829 – June 8, 1895) was a German history painter who was a native of Munich. He was the son of painter Wilhelm Lindenschmit the Elder (1806–1848).

Biography

He studied art in Mainz with his uncle, Ludwig Lindenschmit (1809–1893), and afterwards studied at the Academy of Munich, at the Städel Institute in Frankfurt am Main, in Antwerp, and later in Paris, where he created Ernte (Herzog Alba bei der Gräfin von Rudolstadt (Duke of Alba with the Countess of Rudolstadt). These two paintings are now housed at the Kunsthalle Hamburg.[1] From 1853 to 1863, he painted in Frankfurt, later relocating to Munich, where he eventually became a professor to the Academy (1875).[2] During this period of time, he created paintings from the age of the Protestant Reformation as well as works on other subjects from roughly the same time frame.

thumb|275px|The Temple of Antoninus and Faustina in RomeBeginning in the mid-1870s, Lindenschmit's works gradually became more luminous in color, being associated with the modern Munich school of painting. A few of these paintings include:

Notes and References

  1. https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/ADB:Lindenschmit,_Wilhelm_Ritter_von ADB:Lindenschmit, Wilhelm Ritter von
  2. https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/sfz51588.html#ndbcontent Lindenschmit, Wilhelm Ritter von
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=m0IrAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA289 The New International Encyclopaedia
  4. http://www.zeno.org/Meyers-1905/A/Lindenschmit Lindenschmit
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=vMYGAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22Knox+und+die+schottischen+Bilderst%C3%BCrmer%22&pg=PA569 Meyers Grosses Konversations-Lexikon, Volume 12