- Fritz Stuckenberg
Fritz Stuckenberg (1881 in
München ,Germany – 1944 inFüssen ,Germany ) was a German expressionist painter. He was born as Friedrich Bernhard Stuckenberg inMunich , but moved with his family in 1893 to the northern industrial city ofDelmenhorst (nearBremen ), where his father took over as director of the Hansa-Linoleumwerke. After unfinished studies of architecture and art studies inWeimar and Munich, he spent five formative years (1907-1913) in Paris. From there he made excursions toPont-Aven as well as to theProvence (Cassis ,Martigues ) where he "cleaned his palette". He belonged to the circle of artists in the „Café du Dôme “ and exhibited in some of best „Salons“ and galleries in Paris. Coming back to Germany, he took residence in Berlin, where he was discovered in 1916 byHerwarth Walden and integrated into theSturm circle. He became friends withGeorg Muche ,Arnold Topp ,Walter Mehring andMynona . Disillusioned with Walden, he joined in 1919 theArbeitsrat für Kunst aroundWalter Gropius andBruno Taut , later theNovembergruppe . Several „Sturm“-exhibitions, participation in the first Berlin Dadaist exhibition, inclusion in the thirdBauhaus portfolio, mark his rank in the artists' scene of these years. In the early 1920ies, his works were shown in Germany, the USA and the Soviet Union as that of a pioneer of the European avantgarde. Severe illness and financial problems forced Stuckenberg nevertheless to return to his parents in "gloomy Delmenhorst" (as he writes in a letter to the Flemish dadaistPaul van Ostaijen ). Under increasingly difficult conditions, both political and personal, he developed a constructivist and spiritualist late work. All of his pictures were removed from German museums (and some of them destroyed) during the Nazi purges. In the infamous exhibition on "Entartete Kunst " in 1937, his „Straße mit Häusern“ (street with houses, 1921) was exhibited as an example of "degenerate art". During the Second World War he moved to the South of Germany and died there, already almost forgotten. In 1993 he was rediscovered as a part of the modern art avantgarde with a retrospective in Delmenhorst, Berlin and Neuss. A large part of his surviving work is now to be seen in theStädtische Galerie Delmenhorst .
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