Ignaz Gaugengigl
Ignaz Michael Marcel Gaugengigl (29 July 1853, in Passau – 3 August 1932, in Boston) was a German-American painter and engraver who worked primarily in the United States. He specialized in portraits and historical paintings.[1]
Life[]
His father (also named Ignaz) was a teacher who wrote several books on linguistics and related subjects.[2] After finishing school, he attended the Academy of Fine Arts Munich, where he studied under Johann Leonhard Raab and Wilhelm von Diez.
In 1880, he visited his sister in Boston and decided to settle there himself. He quickly assimilated into the city's cultural life and became a friend of Sylvester Koehler, the first curator of prints at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.[3] He was known as the "Meissonier of Boston", because of his many portraits of the "Boston Brahmins" and their families, and was one of the founders of the Guild of Boston Artists. Most of his works are in private collections.
References[]
- ^ Joseph Gutenäcker: Verzeichniß aller Programme und Gelegenheitsschriften, welche an den K. Bayer. Lyzeen, Gymnasien und lateinischen Schule vom Schuljahre 1823/24 bis zum Schlusse des Schuljahres 1859/60 erschinenen sind. Bamberg, 1862, S. 95.
- ^ Amazon.com: Books by Ignaz Gaugengigl, Sr.
- ^ Absolute Arts: Etchings and Drypoints by Gaugengigl
External links[]
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- 1853 births
- 1932 deaths
- 19th-century American painters
- American male painters
- 20th-century American painters
- German painters
- German male painters
- American engravers
- German engravers
- Academy of Fine Arts, Munich alumni
- Painters from Massachusetts
- Artists from Boston
- People from Passau
- German emigrants to the United States
- 20th-century American printmakers
- 20th-century German printmakers