the temple of lsis and osiris mk247
c.1816,painted opera set design,staatliche museen,berlin,germany mk247
c.1816,painted opera set design,staatliche museen,berlin,germany
Portrait of the Artist's Daughter, Marie Gemälde IDENTIFIZIERUNG:: 62451
Portrait of the Artist's Daughter, Marie 1816 Black chalk on reddish paper, 533 x 423 mm Staatliche Museen, Berlin Author: SCHINKEL, Karl Friedrich Title: Portrait of the Artist's Daughter, Marie Form: graphics , 1801-1850 , German , portrait 1816 Black chalk on reddish paper, 533 x 423 mm Staatliche Museen, Berlin Author: SCHINKEL, Karl Friedrich Title: Portrait of the Artist's Daughter, Marie Form: graphics , 1801-1850 , German , portrait
Study for a Monument to Queen Louise Gemälde IDENTIFIZIERUNG:: 62454
Study for a Monument to Queen Louise 1810 Watercolour, 720 x 520 mm Nationalgalerie, Berlin The picture shoes a design by the architect Schinkel for a Gothic mausoleum for the Prussian Queen Luise. This warm-hearted patron of the arts was much mourned, and Schinkel chose the Gothic style both as a patriotic expression, and for its echoes of organic natural forms, hinting at nature's processes of renewal and thus of eternal life. The complex patterns of vaulted arches receding into a light-filled interior evoke the German forests. As things turned out, the grieving king preferred a classical scheme, which still stands in the park at Charlottenburg, and economic conditions after the War of Liberation left Schinkel's grander vision for a vast Gothic cathedral in Berlin unrealized. Author: SCHINKEL, Karl Friedrich Title: Study for a Monument to Queen Louise Form: graphics , 1801-1850 , German , study 1810 Watercolour, 720 x 520 mm Nationalgalerie, Berlin The picture shoes a design by the architect Schinkel for a Gothic mausoleum for the Prussian Queen Luise. This warm-hearted patron of the arts was much mourned, and Schinkel chose the Gothic style both as a patriotic expression, and for its echoes of organic natural forms, hinting at nature's processes of renewal and thus of eternal life. The complex patterns of vaulted arches receding into a light-filled interior evoke the German forests. As things turned out, the grieving king preferred a classical scheme, which still stands in the park at Charlottenburg, and economic conditions after the War of Liberation left Schinkel's grander vision for a vast Gothic cathedral in Berlin unrealized. Author: SCHINKEL, Karl Friedrich Title: Study for a Monument to Queen Louise Form: graphics , 1801-1850 , German , study