Carl Larsson
A Sweden Museum


Carl Larsson's Oil Paintings
Carl Larsson Museum
May 28, 1853–January 22, 1919. Swedish painter.
Carl Larsson

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Here are all the paintings of Johann Michael Rottmayr 01

ID Painting  Oil Pantings, Sorted from A to Z     Painting Description
71722 Kephalos und Prokris Johann Michael Rottmayr Kephalos und Prokris 1706(1706) Oil on canvas 145 x 121 cm (57.09 x 47.64 in)
77641 Self Portrait in a Blue Coat with Cuirass Johann Michael Rottmayr Self Portrait in a Blue Coat with Cuirass Date 1648-1650 Medium Oil on canvas Dimensions 91,8 x 78,9 cm[1] cyf
33624 St Benno Johann Michael Rottmayr St Benno mk86 1702 Oil on canvas 118x100cm Munich,Bayerische Staatsgemaldesammlungen
55743 St Benno Johann Michael Rottmayr St Benno mk244 1702 Oil on canvas 118x100cm

Johann Michael Rottmayr
Austrian,1654-1730 Austrian painter and draughtsman. He is most notable for large-scale religious and secular decorative schemes, and his career heralded the important 18th-century German contribution to late Baroque and Rococo fresco painting. He was probably taught by his mother, who was a painter of wooden sculpture. Between 1675 and 1687-8 he was in Venice as a pupil and assistant of the Munich artist Johann Carl Loth, whose studio attracted many painters from Austria and southern Germany. It is possible that Rottmayr also visited other Italian cities, in particular Bologna and Rome. He returned to Salzburg in the late 1680s a mature painter and immediately received commissions for panels and frescoes. In 1689 he painted mythological scenes for the Karabinierisaal at the Residenz in Salzburg (in situ); in composition and style these are close to high Baroque models, particularly the work of Pietro da Cortona and Peter Paul Rubens. Such models, as well as the example of Loth, and Venetian painting, had an important influence on Rottmayr's panel paintings of this period, for example the Sacrifice of Iphigenia (c. 1691; Vienna, Belvedere) or St Agnes (1693-5) and St Sebastian (1694; both Passau, Cathedral). In these, the solidity of the figures is emphasized through the use of intense colours. For Rottmayr, however, the rational development of the figures and the composition was less important than the overall effect achieved by the use of colour. Incorrect details of anatomy and perspective found compensation in greater expressiveness, mainly conveyed by gesture and pose. Rottmayr's images are filled with plastic elements, creating a staccato effect. Several very important early commissions paved the way for Rottmayr's move to Vienna in the late 1690s.
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