Johann Frank Kirchbach (2 June 1859, London – 19 March 1912, Schliersee), was a German historical-, portrait-, genre- and landscape-painter; who also operated as a graphic designer and illustrator.
Biography
His father was the artist, Ernst Kirchbach, who was in exile at the time of his birth. He received his first education at the Dresden Academy (1878) then, as a student of the Munich Academy, exhibited for the first time in 1881, in Munich and Berlin. In 1882, He won first prize for his painting "Duke Christoph the fighter, on the corpse of the last Abensberger"[1] Between 1882 and 1883, he traveled to Italy, France, and England.
When he returned, he took part in the painting of the Schloss Drachenburg[2] near Bonn, with scenes from the Nibelungenlied. The primary image, "The Quarrel of the Queens"[3] was his work.
In 1889 he was appointed as Head of Department at the Städelschule (Institute of Frankfurt), where he worked seven years before returning to Munich in 1896 as a teacher of life drawing at the Munich Academy. In his last years, he painted mostly portraits.
Notes
^Gr. Herzog Christoph der Kämpfer an der Leiche des letzten Abensbergers
^Gr. Christus vertreibt die Wechsler aus dem Tempel
Sources
Frank Church Bach . In: Ulrich Thieme and Felix Becker, General Encyclopedia of Artists of the antiquity to the present, Volume 20, EA Seemann, Leipzig, 1927, pg.348
Hans Ries: Illustrations and illustrators of children's book in German-speaking 1871-1914, Osnabrück 1992, pp. 635 et seq ISBN3-87898-329-8