Clemens von Zimmermann

Clemens von Zimmermann
Clemens von Zimmermann.

Clemens von Zimmermann, historical painter, was born at Düsseldorf in 1788; he studied in his native town under Johann Peter von Langer, and in 1808 he accompanied his master to Munich, where he entered the Academy. In 1815 he went to Augsburg, where he was appointed professor and director of the school of art. Ten years later he became professor at the Munich Academy. He assisted Peter von Cornelius in his frescoes at the Glyptothek, and was also engaged on decorative work in the colonnades of the Hofgarten, in the corridor of the Pinakothek, and in the dining-hall of the Residenz. He died at Munich in 1869. The Neue Pinakothek contains two of his pictures - Cimabue finding Giotto sketching a Lamb and Pilgrims to Loretto from the Roman Campagna. He painted a large number of portraits, among them those of Queen Hortense and of King Max I. of Bavaria, and etched and lithographed many views of Rome.

Reference

  • This article incorporates text from the article "Zimmermann, Clemens von" in Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers by Michael Bryan, edited by Robert Edmund Graves and Sir Walter Armstrong, an 1886–1889 publication now in the public domain.