As of October 2006, the highlighted portions of this
Wikipedia article appear to be plagiarized from:
www.hans-rottenhammer.de

Wikipedia Watch
Your continued donations keep Wikipedia running!    

Hans Rottenhammer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Minerva and the Muses, by Hans Rottenhammer, painted 1603
Enlarge
Minerva and the Muses, by Hans Rottenhammer, painted 1603

Hans Rottenhammer, or Johannes Rottenhammer, (1564-1625) was a German painter.

From 1582 to 1588 Rottenhammer served an apprenticeship under the Munich painter Hans Donauer the Elder and then went to Italy.

Rottenhammer's travels took him to Rome (1590-96) and later to Venice (from 1596). In Rome Rottenhammer came into contact with the Bamboccianti, as the circle of young painters from Flanders and Holland was known, and especially to Paul Bril and Jan Bruegel the Elder, and collaborated closely with them. In Venice, he was influenced by the work of Tintoretto and Veronese.

From 1600 Rottenhammer had contacts at the Prague court of the Emperor Rudolf II, who commissioned a Feast of the Gods from him and used him as an agent to negotiate the acquisition of Venetian painting.

In 1606 Rottenhammer returned to Bavaria and was given the freedom of the city and the right to call himself master in Augsburg. Rottenhammer was summoned to the court of Prince Ernst, Count Holstein-Schaumburg, in 1609. There he worked on decorating the Goldener Saal in Schloss Bückeborg, for which he executed four ceiling paintings featuring allegorical representations of the four elements.

In 1613, however, Rottenhammer broke with his patron. The last years of Rottenhammer's life were marked by a noticeable decline in productivity, which was probably due to stiffer competition from other Augsburg artists.

Rottenhammer's importance to German art history is his reception of the essentials of late Cinquecento Venetian composition, which he translated into the small format of the cabinet picture as its first exponent in Germany. Rottenhammer's handling of landscape, on the other hand, reveals northern influences. Usually painted on copper, his mythological or religious pictures continued to be highly appreciated into the 18th century. Rottenhammer also executed large altarpieces for churches in Munich and Augsburg as well as decorative frescoes for the Munich Residenz. His late work anticipates elements of Classicism.

Commons logo
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Personal tools
In other languages