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Alexander von Humboldt by Joseph Karl Stieler
Alexander von Humboldt di Joseph Karl Stieler

Alexander von Humboldt

Alexander von Humboldt c1843 by German Painter Joseph Karl Stieler (1781 – 1858); era un ritrattista neoclassico che lavorò come pittore di corte reale per i re bavaresi e che è noto per la Galleria delle bellezze al castello di Nymphenburg a Monaco e per il suo ritratto di Ludwig van Beethoven, che ha fatto 1820.

This is a magnificent portrait of Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Alexander von Humboldt (1769 – 1859) a Prussian polymath (a person who’s knowledge spans a significant number of subjects), geographer, naturalist, explorer, and proponent of Romantic philosophy and science.

His quantitative work on Botanical Geography laid the foundation for the field of Biogeography; and his approach and advocacy for long term Systematic Geophysical measurement became the foundation on which modern Geomagnetic and Meterological monitoring is based.

Questa è una riproduzione ritoccata di arte digitale dei vecchi maestri di un'immagine di pubblico dominio.

Informazioni sotto da Wikipedia.org

Joseph was born in the city of Mainz, Germany to a long-established family of engravers, punchcutters and die makers; receiving some artistic training from his father, August Friedrich Stieler (1736 – 1789).

After the untimely death of his father, Joseph Karl autodidactically completed his apprenticeship and began his career as a painter of miniatures, which were increasingly sought after by the bourgeois circles.

After Mainz had been occupied by French revolutionary troops in 1792, Stieler followed the expelled court of Prince-Archbishop Friedrich Karl Joseph von Erthal to Aschaffenburg.

Here he met with the later Archbishop Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg, who became his most important patron and sponsor.

A partire dal 1802 per 1805 he attended the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna in the master class of Heinrich Füger. Stieler’s portrait style was most especially shaped during his work in the Parisian atelier of François Gérard, a student of Jacques-Louis David.

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