Between 1802 and 1811 he stayed in Rome, where he became an important figure in that city's artistic and intellectual circles.[1] He was an especially good friend of Wilhelm von Humboldt and his family. In Schick's last years, his style of Raphaelesque classicism gradually acquired a romantic orientation. In 1809, he was presented with a special citation by a group of French and Italian artists.
He returned to Stuttgart in 1811, but died there only a few months later, of heart disease.
Simon, Karl: "Ph. Fr. Hetsch u. Gottlieb Schick in ihren persönl. Beziehungen." in: Württ. Vierteljahresschr. f. Landesgeschichte, ed. 20–21, 1911, p. 161 ff.
Von Holst, Christian (Ed.): Schwäbischer Klassizismus zwischen Ideal und Wirklichkeit 1770-1830. Stuttgart, 1993. Шаблон:ISBN
Gottlieb Schick. Ein Maler des Klassizismus. Ed. Ulrike Gauß & Christian von Holst. (Exhibit Catalog). Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Stuttgart, 1976.
Bernardini, Ingrid Sattel. "Schick, Gottlieb". In Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online, (accessed 30 December 2011; subscription required).
↑ Перейти обратно: 1,01,11,2Bernardini, Ingrid Sattel. "Schick, Gottlieb". Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 31 Dec. 2014.