German painter
Otto Piltz (1887); engraving by Hermann Gedan (?-?)
Otto Piltz (28 June 1846, Allstedt - 20 August 1910, Pasing ) was a German genre painter and illustrator for Die Gartenlaube .
Life
He was the son of a soap-maker. After an apprenticeship as a decorative painter in Halle , he studied at the Weimar Saxon-Grand Ducal Art School from 1866 to 1871.[ 1] His teachers were Paul Thumann , Bernhard Plockhorst and Charles Verlat . During the 1870s, he worked at the artists' colonies in Kleinsassen and Willingshausen .[ 1] He lived in Weimar until 1886, Berlin until 1889, then in Pasing until his death. In 1882, he was appointed a Professor by Grand Duke Charles Alexander .[ 1] He became a member of the Munich Secession in 1893.
He painted both urban and rural scenes but was especially successful at painting children. He also travelled throughout Thuringia , Hesse , Bavaria and the Tyrol , documenting the local costumes that were already beginning to disappear. He sometimes accompanied a young friend, Franz Marc , on painting excursions to Dachau .
He died of pneumonia , following a heart attack .[ 1]
Selected paintings
References
Further reading
Friedrich von Boetticher: Malerwerke des 19. Jahrhunderts . Leipzig 1944.
External links
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Otto Piltz .
International National Artists People