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  • 1930's oak framed print of an Alpine scene with a rambler . German or Austrian
  • 1930's oak framed print of an Alpine scene with a rambler . German or Austrian
  • 1930's oak framed print of an Alpine scene with a rambler . German or Austrian
  • 1930's oak framed print of an Alpine scene with a rambler . German or Austrian
  • 1930's oak framed print of an Alpine scene with a rambler . German or Austrian

oak framed print of an Alpine scene by Hans Beat Wieland

oak framed print of an Alpine scene by Hans Beat Wieland (June 11, 1867 – August 23, 1945)[1] was a Swiss painter, best known for his realist paintings of Alpine sceneries.

Wieland was born in Gallusberg, Mörschwil, canton of St. Gallen, but he grew up in Basel. He left school shortly before the Matura in 1883, preferring to pursue a career in painting over the school degree. Two years later, he moved to Munich, where he studied first at the private art school of Paul Nauen and then at the Academy of Fine Arts. Together with Michael Zeno Diemer (1867 - 1939), he painted a large panoramic painting for the World's Fair of 1893 in Chicago, and in 1894, he joined the Munich Secession. In 1896/97, he travelled to Spitsbergen to witness the take-off of Salomon Andrée's balloon expedition to the North Pole. In 1898, he married Elsa Henkell, whom he had first met at the Academy in Munich.

Wieland specialized on realist paintings of Alpine mountains . Measures 108cm x 60 cm

1905
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Please quote ref no. 474MP

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