Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz
Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz (21 July 1922 – 13 March 2011) was a German painter, graphic designer and academic scholar.
Life[]
Meyer-Dennewitz was born in Leipzig. After attending the Leipzig School of Arts and Crafts from 1938 to 1940, Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz studied at the Academy of Visual Arts in Leipzig from 1941 to 1944 under Karl Miersch, Wilhelm Thiele and Hans Soltmann. During this time she received private lessons from Max Schwimmer. After her studies she worked as an assistant teacher for drawing and art history until 1945, then as a freelance artist.[1]
In 1950/51, Meyer-Dennwitz was a master student of Max Lingner and Heinrich Ehmsen at the Academy of Arts, Berlin. In 1950, she was one of the co-founders of the . She remained connected to her hometown of Leipzig for a long time, from 1953 to 1957 as an assistant and lecturer at the , from 1958 as a lecturer and from 1969 to 1982 as head of the at the Karl Marx University Leipzig, where she held a Professor position at the Institute for Art Education from 1961 to 1982. She is known to many children and young people through her prints in schoolbooks of the German Democratic Republic.[2]
Meyer-Dennewitz had already lived in
since 1964, initially as a summer residence, and from 1991 until her death in 2011 all year round. She also ran a children's circle there.Meyer-Dennewitz was married twice. Her first husband, Erich Dennewitz, was killed in the Second World War. Afterwards she married the graphic artist Wolfgang Meyer. Her son theatre studies in Leipzig, then worked at the Theater Cottbus, the in Dresden, the Plauen Theater and was artistic director of the from 1991 to 2010.
studiedStudy trips took her to Czechoslovakia (1956,1957,1960,1980), the Soviet Union (among others in 1959, 1963, 1969), Korea (1959), Yugoslavia (1961), Romania (1979) and Hungary (1981).
Meyer-Dennewitz died in 2011 at the age of 88 in the district of Carwitz, which belongs to the municipality of Feldberger Seenlandschaft, and was buried in the local cemetery.[3]
Work[]
- 1957 (drawing on wood) and Zyklus Großer Oktober
- 1958 Cycle Gedanken zum The Caucasian Chalk Circle (woodcut)
- 1969 Urlaub in Carwitz I (algrafy)
- 1970 Carmina Burana (woodcut series)
- 1980 Das Geburtshaus (Drawing)
- 1982 Tapestry-Entwurf zum 575. Geburtstag der Leipziger Universität (Tempera)
- 1998 Herbstlied (pastel on hardboard)
- 2001 Gefährliches Spiel (pastel on hardboard)
- 2005 Selbst (Pastell)
- 1966 Buchillustration Der Mann mit der gelben Tasche (Deutscher Militärverlag Berlin)
Exhibitions[]
- 1974/75, 1982, 2010 Leipzig
- 1983 Neubrandenburg, Kulturhaus (Painting, Graphics and Hand Drawings, 60th Birthday Exhibition)
- 2005 Marburg
- 2010 Leipzig "Heimspiel" Ausstellung zum 88. Geburtstag
Meyer-Dennewitz was represented at the [4]
in 1953, 1962 and 1967, and works by her were shown at the Leipzig district art exhibitions in 1955, 1959, 1965, 1972, 1974, 1979 and 1985.Awards[]
- 1957: Art Prize of the Society for German–Soviet Friendship
- 1962: Kunstpreis der Stadt Leipzig
- 1968:
- 1978:
- 1982: Johannes-R.-Becher-Medaille
- 1984: Hans-Fallada-Preis Stufe I, II, III.[5]
References[]
- ^ Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz on Galerie-koenitz
- ^ Gabriele Meyer- Dennewitz on thomsdorfer-kunstkaten
- ^ In memoriam Prof. G. Meyer-Dennewitz
- ^ Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz on Google Books
- ^ "Prof. Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz". . Retrieved 28 January 2021. The Hans Fallada Prize indicated is not the Hans Fallada Prize of the city of Neumünster.
External links[]
- Literature about Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz in the State Bibliography (Landesbibliographie) of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
- Literature by and about Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz in the German National Library catalogue
- Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz beim Verbundprojekt
- Künstlerportrait bei Marburg-Album.de
- Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz beim Thomsdorfer Kunstkaten
- Erster Preis im Plakatwettbewerb Pro Heide
- Gabriele Meyer-Dennewitz im Professorenkatalog der Universität Leipzig
- G. Meyer-Dennewitz in der Liste der Professoren ab 1945–1991
- 20th-century German printmakers
- 20th-century German painters
- German women painters
- Leipzig University faculty
- 1922 births
- 2011 deaths
- Artists from Leipzig
- 20th-century German women