Elisabeth Reuter
Elisabeth Reuter (21 September 1853 in Lübeck – 7 May 1903 in Heidelberg) was a German landscape painter.
Biography
Her father was a doctor and her uncle was the Lutheran church leader, Ludwig Trummer. Her sister, Ada, was married to the poet, Emanuel Geibel. She showed an early aptitude for art, and was encouraged by her parents.
In 1873, at the age of twenty, she began her studies in Munich with Max Kuhn and later worked with Julius Zimmermann (1824–1906); concentrating on watercolors, which were popular and sold well.
She then went to Hamburg with August Eduard Schliecker, who taught her architectural painting. Towards the end of the 1880s, she lived in Rotenburg, where she created some of her best-known works. Later, she went to Friedrichsruh and was employed by Otto von Bismarck, who commissioned paintings of his park and estate.
At the start of the 1890s, she turned to oil painting; taking lessons from Hermann Eschke in Berlin then, in 1893, spending a year in Düsseldorf with Gustav Adolf Schweitzer. This was followed by several years of travelling and painting in Norway. For two years, she had a studio in Helgeland. Upon returning to Lübeck, she became a drawing teacher.
Three weeks before her death, she went to the Black Forest on a painting expedition. During her work near Heidelberg Castle she caught a severe cold that turned into a fatal pulmonary inflammation.
References
Sources
- (in German) Elisabeth Reuter. In: Ulrich Thieme, Felix Becker (editors): Allgemeines Lexikon der Bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart. Band 28, E. A. Seemann, Leipzig 1934, S. 199.
- Lübeckische Blätter, 1903, (obituary)
- "Eine Lübecker Künstlerin." In: Vaterstädtische Blätter, 1903, Nr. 20, 17 May 1903 (obituary)
- Gustav Lindke: Alte Lübecker Stadtansichten, Lübeck 1968, Nrs. 190, 250, 254
External links
Media related to Elisabeth Reuter at Wikimedia Commons