Johannes Boese

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Johannes Boese (c. 1900)

Johannes Boese (27 December 1856, Ostrog (near Ratibor) – 20 April 1917, Berlin), also spelled Böse, was a German sculptor and art professor.

Life and work

Siegesallee Group 4

Boese was originally trained as a wood carver, then attended the vocational school in

Gleiwitz. In 1877, he enrolled at the Prussian Academy of Arts where he studied sculpture with Fritz Schaper. After five years, he joined the Master Class taught by Albert Wolff.[1]

However, Boese's true wish was to become an architect and he attempted to approach that goal by providing small sculptures for building projects. He clung to that goal even when his statue "Narcissus" won a medal at the Melbourne Centennial Exhibition in 1888. It wasn't until the early 1890s that, swayed by public recognition and several more awards, Biese decided to devote himself to monumental sculptures.[1]

In 1887, he had created a small figure called "Kaiser Wilhelm I with a Magnifying Glass" that attracted the attention and, eventually, the patronage of Kaiser

Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights). The figures were severely damaged in World War II and are currently at the Spandau Citadel
.

In 1902, Boese's monument to Kaiser Friedrich III in Posen gained him a professorship at the Academy. He was a member of several professional and cultural organizations, including the "Society for the History of Berlin" and the "Association of Berlin Artists". He was later awarded the Order of the Red Eagle (fourth class).[1]

Other selected major projects

The Eichendorff Monument in Ratibor (recently restored)

References

Further reading

  • Ethos & Pathos – Die Berliner Bildhauerschule 1786-1914, Exhibition Catalog: Peter Bloch, Sibylle Einholz and Jutta von Simson, Berlin 1990
  • Peter Paret: Die Berliner Secession. Moderne Kunst und ihre Feinde im Kaiserlichen Deutschland, Ullstein, Frankfurt 1983, .
  • Thieme-Becker: Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler, Vol.4. Leipzig 1910, pg.206

External links

Media related to Johannes Boese at Wikimedia Commons