Hubert Sattler (painter)
Hubert Sattler (21 January 1817 – 3 April 1904) was an Austrian landscape painter who worked under the pseudonyms Louis Ritschard, E. Grossen, and Gottfried Stähly-Rychen.
Hubert Sattler | |
|---|---|
![]() Possible self-portrait | |
| Born | Hubert Sattler 21 January 1817 Salzburg, Austria |
| Died | 3 April 1904 (aged 87) Vienna, Austria |
| Known for | Painting |
Biography
Hubert Sattler was born in Salzburg; his father, Johann Michael Sattler, was also a landscape painter and created the Sattler Panorama of Salzburg in 1825–29. Hubert donated it and more than 300 of his own works to the city in 1870; the panorama is on permanent display in the Panorama Museum inside the Salzburg Museum, together with a rotating exhibit drawn from approximately 150 of his cosmoramas held by the museum.[1]
Sattler toured with his father and first learnt drawing and painting from him,[2] then attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna at the age of 12, and his father worked with him on many of his early works.[3]
His work is characterised by a high level of detail, in which they were displayed under lights in a dark room to customers looking through an aperture and often a magnifying lens.[2][3] He painted landscapes in many European countries and also the Near East and Latin America, including views of both natural vistas and cities.[4] His views were unusually accurate and up to date; he went on painting expeditions and then worked at home from his own detailed studies and from photographs,[1] while many previous cosmoramas were based on old engravings.[2] On her 1842 journey to the Near East, Ida Pfeiffer of Vienna met him and travelled with him for a while; in her published diary, she recorded how he was stoned by local people while sketching in Damascus.[5] He exhibited his cosmoramas in many countries including in North America, travelling with a specially made temporary building. Late in life he spent many years in Vienna.[2]
Sattler's son, also Hubert Sattler, was an ophthalmologist.
He died in Vienna and is buried in Salzburg in an honorary grave together with his father.[3] The Hubert-Sattler-Gasse in the Neustadt area of Salzburg was named in his honour.
Gallery
Timbering High in the Alps
Feast of the Redeemer in Venice, 1876
Grand Canyon
Geneva
Paris
Cologne
Boston
Stelvio Pass with the Ortler, 1861
Bad Gastein, c. 1844
Cadiz, 1867
Watermill with a Mountain View
Salzburg in Winter
See also
References
- "Kosmoramen". Salzburg Museum (in German). Archived from the original on 4 January 2015. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
- Constantin von Wurzbach, "Sattler, Hubert", Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Volume 28, Vienna: L. C. Zamarski, 1874, pp. 271–72, online at German WikiSource (in German).
- "Ehrengrab Johann Michael und Hubert Sattler", City of Salzburg, retrieved 5 March 2015 (in German).
- "Sattlers Kosmorama - Eine Weltreise von Bild zu Bild". Wien Museum (in German). Archived from the original on 24 April 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
Exhibition at the Hermesvilla, Vienna Museum, 11 April – 20 November 2013
- Gerhard Plasser, "Hubert Sattler und Ida Pfeiffer (1797–1858)", Salzburger Museumsblätter 9/10, November 2009, pp. 5–7 (in German) (pdf Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine).
External links
Media related to Hubert Sattler (painter) at Wikimedia Commons- Folder for the 2013 Vienna Museum exhibition (pdf)
