Ernst Hassebrauk

curriculum vitae
1905 | born in Dresden |
1925-1927 | studied at the Kunstgewerbeakademie Dresden under Jörg Klemm and Carl Rade and at the Technische Universität (TU) Dresden in the art history and philosophy department |
1927-1932 | studied at the Staatliche Akademie für graphische Künste und Buchgewerbe Leipzig under Alois Kolb, Hans Soltmann and Bruno Héroux; master student of Willi Geiger; studied art history and philosophy at the Universität Leipzig; worked as a drawing teacher |
1932 | honored with the Sächsischer Staatspreis |
1937 | trip to Holland, including a visit to the Frans Hals exhibition |
1938 | relocation to Dresden |
1940-1942 | takes over the management of the private Simonson-Castelli painting school as Woldemar Winkler's successor |
1945 | loss of a large part of his work in the demolition of Dresden |
1946 | vocation to work at the Hochschule für Graphik und Buchkunst Leipzig |
1947 | promotion as a Professor |
1949 | since the freelance work as an artist in Dresden |
1974 | dies in Dresden |
Initially, what the Expressionists of the ›Brücke‹ brought to the city of art, residence, industry and civil servants [Dresden] was also an intensified Impressionism. For Hassebrauk, expressive, ecstatic moments actually only came with age, as an act of self-liberation; in his youth, he was more absorbed in detail – which might make him appear to belong to the Neue Sachlichkeit movement, but he was never objectively cold, always oscillating between impression and expression.
Ernst Hassebrauk. Leben und Werk, Stuttgart/Zürich: Belser Verlag 1981, S. 8
Anyone familiar with Hassebrauk's work will appreciate its baroque character and its identity with the city in which he worked. Hassebrauk himself, with his imposing stature, was a baroque figure, full of sensitivity and responsiveness. The Baroque suited him, as Werner Schmidt once wrote, in the sense of magnificent opulence, powerful movement, fascinating appearance and, at the same time, encyclopaedic scope.
Ernst Hassebrauk. 1905-1974, Dresden: Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Gemäldegalerie Neue Meister 1979, S. 35
The painter's impetuous temperament found its freest expression in still lifes. Hassebrauk's colouristic experiences allowed him to create cheerful and, despite all the movement, harmonious creations. He particularly enjoyed painting arrangements of fruit and fine vessels, and in his later years he developed a certain preference for floral still lifes. Technically, he used acrylic colours and gouaches, as well as collage, and achieved the finest colour differentiations in pastel (often on grey-blue French paper). In terms of colour, Hassebrauk loved a tension that was enhanced by generous, visible brushstrokes. Often, a light green is set against a heavy violet, and strong, prominent red, which brings a dynamic quality, can also be found. The forms are powerful and swelling, with broad coloured lines occasionally undulating around the contours of the objects.
Ernst Hassebrauk. Aquarelle, Zeichnungen, Collagen, Leipzig: Insel-Verlag 1980. S. 14
further exhibitions
1929 | Museum der Bildenden Künste, Leipzig: ›Ernst Hassebrauk. Portrait design‹ |
1931 | Leipziger Kunstverein |
1944/1945 | Kunstausstellung Kuehl, Dresden (with Rudolf Schramm-Zittau) |
1953 | Städtische Kunstsammlung, Goerlitz: ›Graphic works and hand drawings‹ |
1960 | Staatliches Lindenau-Museum, Altenburg: ›Portrait and landscape‹ |
1969 | Albertinum, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden: ›Dresden in the work of Ernst Hassebrauk‹ |
1974 | Wort und Werk, Leipzig: ›Works from 4 decades‹ |
1976 | Kunstausstellung Kühl, Dresden: ›Painting, graphic art‹ |
Galerie Wolfgang Ketterer, Muenchen: ›Oil painting, watercolors, drawings, graphic‹ | |
1979 | Gemaeldegalerie Neue Meister, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden (major memory exhibition and retrospective) |
Galerie Doebele, Ravensburg: ›Painting, graphic art‹ | |
1981 | Klingspor-Museum, Offenbach: ›Dresden visions and documents from his Leipzig period‹ |
Kunstforum, Heilbronn | |
1982 | Galerie Carl Blechen, Cottbus |
Kunsthalle, Rostock | |
1984 | Kunsthalle am Theaterplatz, Weimar |
1985 | Museum der bildenden Künste, Leipzig (on his 80th birthday) |
Kunstausstellung Kuehl, Dresden | |
Galerie Doebele, Ravensburg | |
1991 | Galerie am Sachsenplatz, Leipzig |
1992 | Galerie Schlichtenmaier, Grafenau |
2005 | Galerie Neue Meister, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden |
Otto-Dix-Haus, Hemmenhofen: ›Between Kokoschka and Dix‹ (participation) | |
Galerie Schlichtenmaier, Grafenau: ›Realist-Impressionist-Expressionist‹ | |
Kunstausstellung Kuehl, Dresden | |
2009 | Kunstverein Aalen: ›Ernst Hassebrauk in private ownership in southwestern Germany‹ |
2011/2012 | Kunsthalle im Lipsius-Bau, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden: ›Neue Sachlichkeit in Dresden. Painting of the 1920s from Dix to Querner‹ |
2013 | Kunsthandlung Koenitz (heute GALERIE HIMMEL): ›Still life. A baroque celebration of colors‹ |