Karl Jakob Theodor Leybold
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2020) |
Karl Jakob Theodor Leybold (19 March 1786, Stuttgart - 20 July 1844, Stuttgart) was a German painter, engraver and lithographer.
Biography
[edit]He was born to the miniaturist and copper engraver, Johann Friedrich Leybold, who also taught engraving in Vienna. It was there, at the Academy of Fine Arts, that Karl received his artistic training. One his father's associates, Eberhard von Wächter, had a major influence on his choice of subject matter and style.
In 1807, thanks to a grant from the art patron and collector, Count Moritz von Fries, he was able to travel to Rome, where he studied and worked until 1814. Then, after a few more years in Vienna, where he earned his living painting portraits, he returned to Stuttgart in 1821, where he later served as a professor at the State Academy of Fine Arts (from 1829), and Inspector at the old Staatsgalerie (from 1842). He was named an honorary member of the Vienna Academy in 1836.
His 1826 depiction of Charon was personally praised by Goethe.[1]
Three of his brothers were also artists: Edward Friedrich , Heinrich Gustav Adolf and Rudolf Moritz (1806-1857). One of his sisters married the landscape painter, Gottlob Friedrich Steinkopf, who had studied with his father.
Gallery
[edit]-
Portrait of Johann Heinrich Dannecker, 1822
-
Portrait of Friederike von Dannecker, née Kolb, 1827
-
Portrait of Pauline Freifrau von Koenig-Warthausen (1805-1872), 1842
-
Portrait of two children with an extensive landscape beyond, 1823
-
Portrait of a Lady, 1830
-
Princess Sophie of Württemberg, 1839
References
[edit]- August Wintterlin (1883), "Leybold, Karl Jakob Theodor", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 18, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 516–517
External links
[edit]- Literature by and about Karl Jakob Theodor Leybold in the German National Library catalogue
- Entry about Karl Jakob Theodor Leybold in the database Gedächtnis des Landes on the history of the state of Lower Austria (Lower Austria Museum)