LOT 381:
Hermann Eschke (German 1823-1900) - Misdroy (Poland), Oil on Canvas Laid on Board, 1895. Signed, titled ...
more...
|
|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Sold for: $320 (₪1,043)
₪1,043
Start price:
$
200
Estimated price :
$1,000 - $2,500
Buyer's Premium: 20%
VAT: 18%
On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
|
Hermann Eschke (German 1823-1900) - Misdroy (Poland), Oil on Canvas Laid on Board, 1895.
Signed, titled and dated.
40x60cm.
Hermann Wilhelm Benjamin Eschke (6 May 1823, Berlin - 15 January 1900, Berlin) was a German painter who specialized in marine art.
In 1840, at the age of seventeen, he began his studies with Professor Wilhelm Herbig and, upon his recommendation, attended the Prussian Academy of Art from 1841 to 1845. After graduating, he obtained a position in the studios of the marine painter, Wilhelm Krause, where he remained until 1848. Through Krause's recommendation, he obtained a similar position in the studios of Eugene Lepoittevin in Paris.
In 1850, he took extensive study trips through Southern France and the Pyrenees. When he returned to Berlin, he became a freelance artist. Over the next thirty years, he continued to travel frequently; visiting the North Sea, Norway, Wales, the Isle of Wight, Jersey and Brittany, among other places. All of these trips produced numerous sketches that were later turned into oil paintings, although he also did some work en plein aire.
Among his most familiar works are those created together with his son, Richard Eschke, for the "Kaiserpanorama": The German Fleet on Display at Zanzibar, and The Seizure of New Guinea. Eschke was later given the title "Koniglicher Professor" and received a gold medal at an exhibition by the "Verein Berliner Kunstler" (Association of Berlin Artists).
He was also well known as a teacher. His students included Louis Douzette, Ernst Koerner, Walter Moras, Carl Saltzmann, Alexander Kircher and Elisabeth Reuter. Altogether, he and his wife Anna had ten children, of whom two, Richard and Oscar, became painters.

