Villa Romana Prize

Villa Romana Prize
Villa-Romana-Preis
The villa, seen from the Via Senese
Awarded for annual award to visual artists
Date 1905
Location Villa Romana, Florence
Country Italy
Presented by Deutscher Künstlerbund
Reward(s) One-year artistic residence
Website villaromana.org

The Villa Romana Prize, German: Villa-Romana-Preis, is an art prize awarded by the Deutscher Künstlerbund. It was established in 1905 and is the oldest German art award.[1] The prize consists of a one-year artistic residence in the Villa Romana, a nineteenth-century villa on the Via Senese in the southern outskirts of Florence, in Tuscany in central Italy.

Max Klinger and Elsa Asanijeff in the garden of the villa, April 1905
The painter Maria Caspar-Filser with her family in front of Villa Romana, 1914

Max Klinger, who in 1903 had become vice-president of the Deutscher Künstlerbund, established the Villa Romana as a study centre for artists in 1905.[2] He had bought it that year for 60,000 gold lire. The prize was first awarded in that year also.[1]

Among the many recipients of the award are Max Beckmann (1906),[3] Ernst Barlach (1909),[4] Joseph Fassbender (1929),[5] Gerhard Marcks,[6] Toni Stadler (1937),[7] Walter Stöhrer (1978),[8] and Georg Baselitz (1965).[9]

Recipients

1905 to 1914

1928 to 1943

  • 1928: Gerhard Marcks[6]
  • 1929: Joseph Fassbender[5]
  • 1930: Josef Henselmann
  • 1931: Franz Xaver Fuhr[1]
  • 1932: Hans Christof Drexel
  • 1933: John Sass
  • 1934: Otto Freytag
  • 1935: Philipp Harth, William Maly
  • 1936: Emy Roeder, Arthur Degner
  • 1937: Toni Stadler[7]
  • 1938: Helmut Ruhmer
  • 1939: Fritz Bernuth
  • 1940: Rudolf Riester
  • 1941: Hans Breker, Karl Clobes, Walter Rossler
  • 1942: Oscar Kreibich, Hubert Nikolaus Lang, Karl Paul, Egon Schiffers
  • 1943: Wilhelm Hausmann, Kurt Lambert, Walter Wichmann

From 1959

  • 1959: Theo Bechteler, Peter Herkenrath, Carl-Heinz Kliemann, Toni Stadler
  • 1960: John Geccelli, Jochen Hiltmann, Guido Jendritzko, Harry Koegler
  • 1961: Peter Brüning, Erwin Eichbaum, Wilhelm Hausmann, Wolfgang vom Schemm
  • 1962: Horst Antes, Gerson Fehrenbach, Paran G'schrey, Hans Kock
  • 1963: Friedrich Karl Gotsch, Günter Ferdinand Ris, Ursula Sax, Horst Skodlerrak
  • 1964: Clemens Fischer, Winfred Gaul, Utz Kampmann, Rolf Szymanski
  • 1965: Georg Baselitz,[9] Franz Bucher, Rainer Küchenmeister, Ludwig Meidner
  • 1966: Hans Baschang, Dietlinde Stengelin, Helmut Sundhaußen, Gota Tellesch
  • 1967: Bernd Berner, Buja Bingemer, Horst Lark, Michael Black
  • 1968: Franz Bernhard, Rolf-Gunter Dienst, Hildegart Lutze, Gatja Helgart Rothe
  • 1969: Henry Brummack, Bernd Damke, Wolf Kahlen, Joachim Schmettau
  • 1970: Markus Lüpertz, Ansgar Nierhoff, Michael Schoenholtz, Ben Willikens
  • 1971: Peter Ackermann, Hermann Albert, Christa Dichgans, Jürgen Paatz
  • 1972: Klaus Fußmann, Edgar Gutbub, Max G. Kaminski, Hansjerg Maier-Aichen
  • 1973: Hede Bühl, Nino Malfatti, Jobst Meyer, Hans Peter Reuter
  • 1974: Kurt Koch, Christiane Maether, Heinz-Günter Prager, Arthur Stoll
  • 1975: Claudia Kinast, Bernd Klötzer, Alf Schuler, Dorothee von Windheim
  • 1976: Michael Bette, Michael Buthe, Nikolaus Lang, Bertram Weigel
  • 1977: Jakob Mattner, Anna Oppermann, Heinz Schanz, Gottfried Wiegand
  • 1978: Abraham David Christian, Elena Engel, Christiane Mobius, Walter Stöhrer[8]
  • 1979: Johannes Brus, Friedemann Hahn, Inge Higher, Mechtild Nemeczek
  • 1980: Fritz Gilow, Rainer Mang, Reinhard Pods, Gerd Rohling
  • 1981: Frank Dornseif, Bruno Erdmann, Dieter Kraemer, Guenter Tužina
  • 1982: Gundi Bindernagel, Karl Bohrmann, Marina Makowski, Eva-Maria Schön
  • 1983: Martin Rosz, Norbert Tadeusz, Nicole van den Plas, Michael Witlatschil
  • 1984: Rolf Behm, Doris Hadersdorfer, George Meissner, Marianne Pohl
  • 1985: Cordula Giidemann, Paul Herberg, Sabine Krasel, William Weiner
  • 1986: Andreas Bindl, Dietz Eilbacher, Andreas Grunert, Max Neumann
  • 1987: Lisa Hoever, Bernd Minnich, Thomas Virnich, Jochen Zellmann, Karl-Heinz Krause
  • 1988: Nikifor Brueckner, Gabriela Dauerer, Walter Kütz, Klaus Schmetz
  • 1989: Jörg Eberhard, Bernd Jünger, Gisela Kleinlein, Berthold Langnickel
  • 1990: Albert Borchardt, Galli (artist), Hermann Josef Mispelbaum, Norbert Radermacher
  • 1991: Vera Leutloff, Eberhard Wagner, Barbara Wille, Carl Emanuel Wolff
  • 1992: Sybille Berke, Katharina Grosse, Klaus Gärtner, Bernd Mechler
  • 1993: Andreas Bee, Jochem Hendricks, Marko Lehanka, Hans-Willi Notthoff
  • 1994: Herbert Barden, Karin Sander, Michel Sauer, Martin Steiner
  • 1995: Isa Dahl, Wolfgang Hambrecht, Andreas Sansoni, Jörg Spamer
  • 1996: Irene Blume, Christiane Dellbrügge and Ralf de Moll, Maik Löbbert, Dirk Löbbert, Michael Munding
  • 1997: Franz Baumgartner, Martin Schmidt, Walter Schreiner, Barbara von Wienskowski
  • 1998: Brunner/Ritz, Tobias Gerber, Peter Herrmann, Andreas Schön
  • 1999: Heiner Blumenthal, Andreas Bunte, Daniel Knorr, Gregor Schneider, Vincent Tavene
  • 2000: Thomas Eller, Michael Kutzner, Simon Vogel, Amelie von Wulffen
  • 2002: Simone Böhm, Dorothea Goldschmidt, Stephan Gripp, Dieter Viegen
  • 2002: Barbara Heim, Hannes Norberg, Daniela Trixl, Christina Zück
  • 2003: Sven-Ole Frahm, Gelke Gaycken, Norbert Kuepper, Markus Vater, Christian Frosch
  • 2004: Ralf Brück, Monika Kapfer, Christian Black, Jörg Wagner
  • 2005: Robert Klümpen, Alexander Laner, Ulla Irina Rossek, Constantin Wallhäuser
  • 2006: Andrea Hanak, Simon Dybbroe Møller, Anna Kerstin Otto, Stefan Thater
  • 2007: Andrea Faciu, Barbara Kussinger, Silke Markefka, Mikhail Pirgelis
  • 2008: Dani Gal, Julia Schmidt, Asli Sungu, Clemens von Wedemeyer
  • 2009: Olivier Foulon, Kalin Lindena, Eske Schluter, Benjamin Yavuzsoy
  • 2010: Anna Heidenhain, Sebastian Dacey, Anna Moller, Martin Pfeifle [10]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Jens Grandt (3 February 2018). Harmonie in Farbe (in German). Berliner Morgenpost. Accessed March 2018.
  2. Annegret Friedrich ([n.d.]). Klinger, Max. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  3. 1 2 Christian Lenz ([n.d.]). Beckmann, Max. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  4. 1 2 Yvonne Modlin ([n.d.]). Barlach, Ernst. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  5. 1 2 Uwe Haupenthal ([n.d.]). Fassbender, Joseph. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  6. 1 2 Martina Rudloff ([n.d.]). Marcks, Gerhard. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  7. 1 2 Ursel Berger ([n.d.]). Stadler, Toni. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  8. 1 2 Dominik Bartmann ([n.d.]). Stöhrer, Walter. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  9. 1 2 Andreas Franzke ([n.d.]). Baselitz [Kern], Georg. Grove Art Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Accessed March 2018. (subscription required).
  10. http://www.villaromana.org/front_content.php?idcat=24&lang=2

Coordinates: 43°45′15″N 11°14′21″E / 43.75417°N 11.23917°E / 43.75417; 11.23917

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.