Blasius Höfel

Blasius Höfel (27 May 1792 – 17 September 1863) was an Austrian copper engraver.

Ludwig van Beethoven, Colour lithograph by Blasius Höfel after the drawing by Louis Letronne, 1814

Life

Born in Vienna, Höfel studied drawing and painting from 1805 at the Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien with Hubert Maurer. From 1807 he devoted himself primarily to chalcography. His most famous work is a portrait of Ludwig van Beethoven, with whom he also had personal contact. Höfel's copperplate engraving was commissioned by the Artaria publishing house in 1814 & Comp. on the basis of a drawing by Louis-René Letronne.[1] From 1820 to 1837 he worked as a drawing teacher at the military academy in Wiener Neustadt. On a study trip to Germany he met Friedrich Wilhelm Gubitz and afterwards he worked with different woodcut techniques. Around 1840 he invented the line etching.

Höfel died in Aigen bei Salzburg at the age of 71.

Literature

gollark: For that sort of thing I would probably just hook up automation and/or many blast furnaces.
gollark: Especially GT:NH.
gollark: GregTech, from what I've heard, seems very hard.
gollark: There isn't time gating like that, although you need several billion RF stored and/or several tens of kRF/t of production to start up a reactor.
gollark: The hard part is that the electromagnets require large amounts of *somewhat* annoying to get resources (tough alloy), and the "fusion core" requires elite plating, requiring a bunch of uranium-238 and "crystal binder", which requires "calcium sulfate" which requires a large complex chemical processing setup.

References

  1. Vgl. Klaus Martin Kopitz, Rainer Cadenbach (ed.) among others: Beethoven aus der Sicht seiner Zeitgenossen in Tagebüchern, Briefen, Gedichten und Erinnerungen. volume 1: Adamberger – Kuffner. Edited by the Beethoven-Forschungsstelle an der Universität der Künste Berlin. Henle, Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-87328-120-2, p. 455–458.
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