Franz Ignaz Oefele

Franz Ignaz Oefele (26 June 1721, Posen - 18 September 1797, Munich) was a German painter, etcher, and miniaturist. His name is sometimes spelled "Öffele" and is occasionally seen as "Oeffele-Piekarski", for reasons unknown.

Self-portrait (1791)
Nursing Mother (1789)

Life

His father was a watchmaker from Bavaria, who died before Oefele was a year old, so he was raised by an uncle in Landsberg am Lech who operated a brewery.[1] There, apparently having displayed some artistic inclinations, he took lessons from a local painter, then went on to Ingolstadt, where he studied with Melchior Buchner and, finally, to Augsburg for lessons with Gottfried Bernhard Göz. He then went to work for Balthasar Augustin Albrecht, the Bavarian court painter. in Munich. After some time there, working with several artists, he went to Venice and was accepted as a student by Giuseppe Nogari.

He remained there for six years, followed by studies with the English history painter John Parker and the Flemish painter Jan Frans van Bloemen in Rome. After eight years in Italy, he returned to Munich and became the court painter for Maximilian III Joseph, Elector of Bavaria. In 1770, he helped to create and was appointed the first Professor of Drawing at what would later become the Academy of Fine Arts, with an annual salary of 100 Gulden.[2][3] He was also a member of the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf.

He painted primarily altarpieces and portraits. Several of his best-known portraits were made into copper engravings by Franz Xaver Jungwirth.[4] Despite his apparent success, it is reported that he left his family in serious financial difficulties.

His older cousin was the historian and librarian Andreas Felix von Oefele,

gollark: Hmm. Well. It seems like you've gone through basically everything I might suggest and also a large amount of things I haven't, so no idea then.
gollark: More "potentially interesting things to do" than "challenge" but:- play some fun computer games- learn programming- read books (there are lots of authors providing books for free because of the whole situation, I find lots through reddit, and amazon's kindle unlimited is fairly cheap and has lots)- do... exercise of some sort... if you like that, I guess- learn about some other subject which interests you, there are loads of resources for stuff on the internet these days- drawing/other art stuff might be interesting for you if you're good at that- write things? There's r/writingprompts on reddit for that sort of thing- learning lockpicking is apparently quite cheap, might be fun, and is somewhat useful (and legal as long as you only do it on stuff you own, probably)
gollark: <@139559766744629248>
gollark: If you still just want "potentially interesting things to do" I can probably come up with some stuff.
gollark: What *sort* of challenge?

References

  1. Barbara Eschenburg: Nach-Barock und Klassizismus, in: Barbara Hardtwig : Gemäldekataloge der Bayerischen Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Verlag Hirmer, 1978, ISBN 3-7774-2930-9, pg.304 (Auszug)
  2. Ekkehard Mai: Die deutschen Kunstakademien im 19. Jahrhundert, Böhlau Verlag, 2010, pg.98 (Digitalisat)
  3. Uta Schedler: Roman Anton Boos (1733-1810). Bildhauer zwischen Rokoko und Klassizismus, Verlag Schnell & Steiner, 1985, ISBN 3-7954-0370-7, pg.35 (Auszug)
  4. "Abbildung in der Regensburger Porträtgalerie". Archived from the original on 2013-02-05. Retrieved 2014-08-09.

Further reading

  • Wilhelm Adolf Schmidt (1887), "Oefele, Franz Ignaz", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), 24, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, p. 165
  • Franz Ignaz Oefele. In: Thieme-Becker, Allgemeines Lexikon der Bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart. Vol. 25, E. A. Seemann, Leipzig 1931, pg. 565.
  • Georg Kaspar Nagler: Neues allgemeines Künstler-Lexicon, Vol.11, pg. 418 (Online)
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