Английская Википедия:Adrian Zingg

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Файл:Adrian Zingg.jpg
Adrian Zingg; portrait by
Anton Graff (1799)
Файл:Zingg.jpg
Landscape near Hohenstein

Adrian Zingg (April 15, 1734, St.Gallen – May 26, 1816, Leipzig) was a Swiss painter.

Life

Adrian Zingg received his professional training from his father, the steel cutter Bartolomäus Zingg, then became an apprentice with the engraver Шаблон:Ill. In 1757, he worked in Bern, painting vedute with Johann Ludwig Aberli. Together with the medalist Johann Caspar Mörikofer (1732–1790), he travelled to Paris in 1759, where Zingg worked for seven years with the engraver Johann Georg Wille.

In 1764, he was supported by Christian Ludwig von Hagedorn as an engraver at the newly founded Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, where he worked as a teacher from 1766. He had an intensive relationship with professor Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich, who acted as a mentor for Zingg. In 1774, after the death of Dietrich, Zingg began to complete his late work and published a total of 87 sheets.[1]

In 1769, he also became a member of the Vienna Academy and, in 1787, a member of the Prussian Academy of Arts. In 1803 he was appointed professor of copper etching at the Dresden Academy. Some of Zingg's famous students included Шаблон:Ill and his son Adrian Ludwig Richter, Heinrich Theodor Wehle and Christoph Nathe.

References

  • This article was initially translated from the German Wikipedia

Шаблон:Reflist

Further reading

  • Johann Kaspar Fuessli: Geschichte der besten Künstler in der Schweitz. Vol.3. Orell, Zürich 1770, pp. 230–239.
  • Шаблон:Cite ADB
  • Sabine Weisheit-Possél: Adrian Zingg (1734–1816). Landschaftsgraphik zwischen Aufklärung und Romantik. LIT Verlag, Münster 2010, Шаблон:ISBN
  • Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, Kupferstich-Kabinett; Petra Kuhlmann-Hodick; Claudia Schnitzer; Bernhard von Waldkirch (Ed.): Adrian Zingg. Wegbereiter der Romantik. Sandstein Verlag, Dresden 2012, Шаблон:ISBN

External links

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Шаблон:Switzerland-painter-stub

  1. J. F. Linck: Monographie der von dem … Hofmaler und Professor … C. W. E. Dietrich radirten, geschabten und in Holz geschnittenen malerischen Vorstellungen: nebst einem Abrisse der Lebensgeschichte des Künstlers. Berlin 1846, S. 35ff.