Ida Maier-Müller
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Ida Maier-Müller
Ida Maier-Müller was a German painter known primarily for her landscape paintings and self-portraits. She was born in Konstanz in 1821 and died in Offenburg in 1904. She settled in Freiburg in 1843, where she captured the beauty of the local landscapes, especially those of the Black Forest and Lake Constance, in her paintings and prints. One of her best-known works is a self-portrait from 1845, showing her with curly hair, aged 25. This self-portrait is one of her most iconic works, and is housed in the Augustiner Museum in Freiburg. Ida Maier was also renowned for her paintings of flowers and other natural scenes, maintaining a strong connection with the 19th-century German landscape tradition. Despite her talent and contributions to regional art, Ida is a little-known artist today, remaining on the fringes of mainstream art history, with few works widely disseminated. Maier-Müller is remembered, to a lesser extent, primarily for one of her fabulous self-portraits. In the hist ...
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Art History
Art history is the study of Work of art, artistic works made throughout human history. Among other topics, it studies art’s formal qualities, its impact on societies and cultures, and how artistic styles have changed throughout history. Traditionally, the discipline of art history emphasized painting, drawing, sculpture, architecture, ceramics and decorative arts; yet today, art history examines broader aspects of visual culture, including the various visual and conceptual outcomes related to art. Art history is a broad discipline encompassing many branches. Some focus on specific time periods, while others concentrate on particular geographic regions, such as the Art of Europe, art of Art of Europe, Europe. Thematic categorizations include feminist art history, iconography, the analysis of symbols, and Design history, design history. Studying the history of art emerged as a means of documenting and critiquing artistic works, with influential historians and methods originating ...
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1821 Births
Events January–March * January 21 – Peter I Island in the Antarctic is first sighted, by Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen. * January 26 – Congress of Laibach convenes to deal with outstanding international issues, particularly the outbreak of a revolution in southern Italy. * January 28 – Alexander Island, the largest in Antarctica, is first discovered by Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen. * February 9 – Columbian College in the District of Columbia is chartered by President James Monroe (it becomes George Washington University). * February 10 – In Mexico, the Embrace of Acatempan takes place between Agustín de Iturbide and Vicente Guerrero, which seals the peace between the viceroyalty troops and the insurgents. * February 28 – Congress of Laibach formally comes to an end. However the leading participants remain as fresh uprisings break out in Northern Italy and Greece. * March 7 – The Battle of Rieti is fought in Italy between intervening Aust ...
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Female Self-portrait In Painting
Female self-portrait in painting is the representation of a person of the female gender painted by herself. While using pictorial techniques and responding to the motivations of the self-portrait in general, the female self-portrait differentiates itself from the male by aspects concerning the physiognomy, the anatomy and the physiology of the subject represented, or related to his psychology. Self-portraiture, as an artistic genre, has played a fundamental role throughout the history of art, serving as a medium through which artists explore their own identity, inner reflections, and their relationship to the outside world. However, when women portray themselves, self-portraiture takes on additional meanings, often subverting social and artistic norms. For women artists, the practice of self-portraiture has historically represented a territory of claiming space in a predominantly male world, in which their contributions were often ignored or marginalized. Place of the female sel ...
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