KUNKEL FINE ART
Munich
Artists
- Otto Dix
- Dodo
- Lyonel Feininger
- Karl Hubbuch
- Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
- Max Klinger
- Gabriel von Max
- Adolph von Menzel
- Rudolf Schlichter
- Franz von Stuck
Works Available By
- Willi Baumeister
- Franz von Bayros
- Giovanni Boldini
- Eduard Büchler
- Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
- Otto Dill
- Olaf Gulbransson
- Erich Heckel
- Ernst Heilemann
- Thomas Theodor Heine
- Adolf Hiremy-Hirschl
- Horst Janssen
- Alexej von Jawlensky
- Ferdinand Keller
- Paul Klee
- Heinrich Kley
- Karin Kneffel
- Georg Kolbe
- Wilhelm Friedrich Kuhnert
- Lotte Laserstein
- Sigmund Lipinsky
- Gilles Lorin
- Hans von Marées
- Ernst Matthes
- Margarete (Marg) Moll
- Richard Müller
- Adolf Münzer
- Lucien Neuquelman
- Emil Nolde
- Charles Johann Palmié
- Max Peiffer Watenphul
- Leo Putz
- Ferdinand Freih. von Reznicek
- Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
- Bernard Schultze
- Wilhelm Schulz
- Kurt Schwitters
- Johann Vierthaler
Georg Kolbe
(German, 1877 – 1947)
Georg Kolbe was a German artist best known for his stylized figurative bronze sculptures. A key player in both the 1905 Berliner Sezession and the Freie Sezession in 1913, Kolbe also produced a series of lithographs, drawings, and small sculptures in his lifetime in tandem with his signature life-size bronzes, the most recognizable of which is 1912's Die Tänzerin. Controversially, Kolbe's youthful, athletic figures made him a favorite of Hitler's during World War II: His sculptures were lauded by the Nazi party, culminating in his placement on the Gottbegnadeten list, which sought to highlight the country's “twelve most important visual artists” that aligned with Aryan ideals. Born on April 15, 1877 in Waldheim, Saxony, Kolbe...