Gustav Seitz (11 September 1906 – 26 October 1969) was a German sculptor and artist.[1][2]
Gustav Seitz | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 26 October 1969 |
Occupation | Sculptor |
Spouse | Luise Zauleck (1937) |
Life
editSeitz was born in the Neckarau quarter of Mannheim,[2] the son of a plasterer. He attended school locally till 1921 and then embarked on a traineeship in his father's trade. In 1922 he visited the Kunsthalle (Modern and contemporary art museum) in Mannheim, and was moved to embark on two-year apprenticeship as a stonemason and sculptor across the river in Ludwigshafen with the sculptor August Dursy. He also attended drawing classes at the Mannheim Vocational College ("Gewerbeschule Mannheim").
After this, between 1924 and 1925 Gustav Seitz studied with the sculptor Georg Schreyögg at the State Arts College ("Landeskunstschule") in Karlsruhe.[2] From 1925 till 1929 he was studying under Ludwig Gies at the Berlin University of the Arts (at that time identified as the "Vereinigte Staatsschulen für Freie und Angewandte Kunst").[3] He went on to become a "Master scholar" with Gerstel and, between 1933 and 1938, with Hugo Lederer[4] at the Prussian Arts Academy in Berlin.[3] His sculptures were beginning to attract attention during this period. An early work, "Liebespaar" in terracotta, had been exhibited back in 1926 at the Flechtheim Gallery in Berlin.[3] Works from the 1930s highlighted in sources include "Weiblicher Akt" (1933), "Musik" (1934) and "Pommersches Bauernmädchen" (1936). He was also able to travel, first, in 1926, to Italy where he was much influenced by Etruscan terracotta antiquities, and later in much of Europe, notably in Paris where he had been able to visit Charles Despiau during a study trip in 1929.
After 1933 his artistic career was hampered by political developments in Nazi Germany and interrupted by war: between 1940 and 1945 he served in the army. His apartment in Berlin and the adjoining studio were destroyed by bombs, along with a large number of his works, in 1943. Having become a prisoner of war, he was released by the Americans in August 1945, and returned to a politically (and later physically) divided Berlin, setting up home in an apartment in the Zähringer Street, with his studio in the nearby Kant Street.[4]
Gustav Seitz output
- -not a complete list
- Hockende (1927)
- Wäscherin (1928)
- Eva (1947)
- Schreitende (1949) Bronze, 165 cm
- Weiblicher Torso (1955) Bronze, 20 cm
- Käthe Kollwitz (1958), 215 cm
- Kniende Negerin (1961) Bronze, 54 cm
- Große Marina (1962) Bronze, 148 × 138 cm
- Flensburger Venus (1963) Bronze, in the Mannheimer Herzogenriedpark
- Geschlagener Catcher (1963/1966) Bronze, 198 cm
- Junge ruhende Sappho (Young resting Sappho 1964/1965)
- Jungfrauenbrünnlein (1969) Bronze 20,5 × 33 × 33 cm
From 1946 till 1950 he worked as a professor at Technische Universität Berlin. In 1949 he was an early recipient of the National Prize of East Germany (Class 3) for his "Victims of Fascism" ("Opfer des Faschismus") memorial in Berlin's Weissensee quarter.[3] As a recipient of the East German national prize during an intense phase in the Cold War he also became a member of the (East) German Arts Academy as a result of which he lost his teaching posts at Technische Universität Berlin and at the Berlin University of the Arts (which were located in West Berlin).[3] Having lost his teaching income in West Berlin, and finding himself adulated in the east, in 1950 he relocated to an apartment in the Treskow Street, in the Pankow district of what after 1949 had increasingly come to be known as East Berlin.[4] In 1950 he succeeded Edwin Scharff at the Fine Arts Academy in Hamburg, triggering a widespread "east-west" debate at the time.[3] During the 1950s he produced much of his best remembered work which was exhibited extensively across both "halves" of Germany and beyond[4] and he was evidently able to travel freely. It was only in 1958 that he relocated his home base from East Berlin to Hamburg.[4]
Works
editSeitz's sculptural legacy includes a number of female nudes with a particular focus on a range of differently posed squatting figures. On occasion he peppered his trademark realism with elements of humour. There were also a number of celebrity portrait busts (such as those of Bertolt Brecht, Ernst Bloch, Thomas and Heinrich Mann). He himself produced several printed publications featuring images of his sculptures.
A particularly well known work is his large (more than 2 meters high) sculpture of Käthe Kollwitz. Kollwitz had died in 1945 and Seitz started work on a gypsum original image of her in 1956. It was completed in 1958 and a bronze casting of it was placed in Kollwitz Square (Kollwitzplat) in Berlin-Pankow in the Autumn of 1960.[5] Another bronze casting of the original was taken more recently and placed in the Sculptures Park in Magdeburg.[6]
References
edit- ^ "Gestorben: Gustav Seitz". Der Spiegel (online). 3 November 1969. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- ^ a b c "Gustav Seitz (German, 1906–1969)". Artnet, Berlin. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f Doris Steinkraus (24 May 2014). "Meister der figürlichen Plastik" (PDF). Wochenend Magazin – Journal. Schloß Trebnitz – Bildungs- und Begegnungszentrum e. V. p. 1. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
- ^ a b c d e "[Gustav Seitz] Lebensdaten und Auswahl der Werke". Nach: Ursula Frenzel, Gustav Seitz Werke und Dokumente Archiv für Bildende Kunst im Germanischen Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg, München 1984. Gustav Seitz Stiftung, Hamburg .... Die Gustav Seitz Stiftung wurde im Jahr 1989 begründet und hat ihren Sitz im letzten Atelierhaus des Bildhauers und Zeichners Gustav Seitz in Hamburg-Blankenese. Retrieved 11 December 2015.
- ^ "Denkmal für Käthe Kollwitz". Senatsverwaltung für Stadtentwicklung und Umwelt, Berlin (Denkmale in Berlin). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
- ^ "1958, Gustav Seitz (1906–1969): Käthe Kollwitz ... Standort: Kloster Unser Lieben Frauen (Außengelände W), Magdeburg". Das schöne Detail ... Skulpturen in Magdeburg – Im Skulpturenpark, Teil 3. Retrieved 11 December 2015.