Franz Krowacek
Franz Krowacek | |
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Born | November 22, 1891 |
Died | 1956 |
Nationality | German |
Citizenship | Germany |
Occupation | Artist |
Franz Krowacek (German, born 22nd November 1891 – died, 1956) was an artist born in Dresden. As a young man his predominant influence was the dynamic development of pictorial art which defined the early decades of the twentieth century. This was an era of experimentation and post-Impressionism, with artists first delving into Expressionism and Abstraction.[1]
Franz Krowacek was taught by several notable tutors including:
As a master student of Carl Bantzer (born 6th August 1857 in Ziegenhain, and died 19th December 1941), who was a member of the Goppeln artists’ colony near Dresden, before being appointed a professor at the Royal Art Academy in Dresden in 1896.
As a student of Osmar Schindler (born 21st December 1867 in Burkhardtsdorf, and died 19th June 1927 in Dresden-Wachwitz) who was appointed professor at the Dresden Art Academy in 1903, teaching there until 1924. Schindler’s other notable students included George Grosz, Karl Hanusch and Bernhard Kretzschmar.
As a student of Richard Müller (born 28th July 1874 in Tschirnitz, Bohemia; died 18th November 1954 in Dresden), a German painter and printmaker. He taught as a professor of drawing at the Dresden Academy from 1900 to 1935.
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