- Karl Ernst Osthaus
Karl Ernst Osthaus (
April 15 1874 –March 25 1921 ) was an important German patron ofavant-garde art and architecture.In 1902, Osthaus founded the
Folkwang Museum inHagen , Germany. After his death, the city of Hagen was unable to purchase the museum collection and in 1922 Hagen was outbid by the neighboring city ofEssen which now houses theFolkwang Collection . A separate museum survives in Hagen, theKarl Ernst Osthaus-Museum .Osthaus was a notable patron of the European avant-garde. Although in his early life he tended to German nationalism, active in the
Pan German League and supporting figures such as the AustrianGeorg von Schönerer , Osthaus's nationalism became tempered with interest in transforming Hagen and Germany into the leading centers of the European avant-garde. Under the guidance of Henry van de Velde, Osthaus began a collection of European modernist painting that comprised one of the first purely modernist collections to be open to the public. The Folkwang in Hagen sponsored some of the earliest exhibits of Expressionist painting, and the collection early on included works byErnst Ludwig Kirchner ,Emil Nolde , andChristian Rohlfs and work by non-German artists such asAristide Maillol ,Jan Thorn-Prikker , andHenri Matisse .Osthaus also attempted to spark interest in avant-garde architecture in Hagen. In this regard, he encountered many frustrations. In some ways, the story of the projects that were not built is more interesting than the projects that were built. Major architects including
Henry van de Velde ,Richard Riemerschmid ,Peter Behrens , andWalter Gropius were all active in Hagen. A small artist colony also emerged including the sculptress Milly Steger, the Dutch artist andtheosophist J.L.M. Lauweriks , and a score of figures important for Hagen's local cultural history.Osthaus's
Jugendstil villa, theHohenhof , is one of the most important examples of bourgeois Jugendstil architecture in Europe. It was recently renovated and is open to the public.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.