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
Lotte Laserstein
(German, 1898 – 1993)
Lotte Laserstein was a German-born Swedish painter best known for her realistic portraits of women in urban settings. Laserstein’s paintings combine the psychological qualities of New Objectivity painters like Christian Schad with the precise naturalism, contour lines, and smooth paint application of the 16th-century painter Hans Holbein. Born on November 28, 1898 in Preussich Holland, Germany to a Jewish family, Laserstein went on to study under Erich Wolfsfeld at the Berlin Academy, where she was introduced to and influenced by the works of Adolph Menzel. Due to her Jewish heritage, she was forced to flee Nazi Germany, emigrating to Sweden in 1937. Today, her works are in the collections of the National Museum of Women in the Arts in...