Paul Baum spent his youth in Meißen, where he began an apprenticeship as a flower painter at the porcelain manufacture at the age of 17. A leave of absence for the purpose of visiting the Dresden... Read full biography
Paul Baum spent his youth in Meißen, where he began an apprenticeship as a flower painter at the porcelain manufacture at the age of 17. A leave of absence for the purpose of visiting the Dresden Kunstakademie resulted in his decision, in 1878, to abandon his apprenticeship and continue his studies... Read full biography
Paul Baum spent his youth in Meißen, where he began an apprenticeship as a flower painter at the porcelain manufacture at the age of 17. A leave of absence for the purpose of visiting the Dresden Kunstakademie resulted in his decision, in 1878, to abandon his apprenticeship and continue his studies in Weimar. Until 1878, as a student, he spent the summer months travelling to northern Germany, Holland and Flanders. Baum returned to Dresden after finishing his studies and joined Friedrich Preller... Read full biography
Paul Baum spent his youth in Meißen, where he began an apprenticeship as a flower painter at the porcelain manufacture at the age of 17. A leave of absence for the purpose of visiting the Dresden Kunstakademie resulted in his decision, in 1878, to abandon his apprenticeship and continue his studies in Weimar. Until 1878, as a student, he spent the summer months travelling to northern Germany, Holland and Flanders. Baum returned to Dresden after finishing his studies and joined Friedrich Preller the younger as a pupil. He joined the Dachau painter colony in 1888 and worked in Allach near Munich. During a trip to Paris in March 1890 Baum saw works by the Impressionists Monet, Pissarro and Sisley. He left Dachau in July of the same year and... Read full biography
Paul Baum spent his youth in Meißen, where he began an apprenticeship as a flower painter at the porcelain manufacture at the age of 17. A leave of absence for the purpose of visiting the Dresden Kunstakademie resulted in his decision, in 1878, to abandon his apprenticeship and continue his studies in Weimar. Until 1878, as a student, he spent the summer months travelling to northern Germany, Holland and Flanders. Baum returned to Dresden after finishing his studies and joined Friedrich Preller the younger as a pupil. He joined the Dachau painter colony in 1888 and worked in Allach near Munich. During a trip to Paris in March 1890 Baum saw works by the Impressionists Monet, Pissarro and Sisley. He left Dachau in July of the same year and settled in Knokke sur mer, the summer camp of the Impressionists. He lived here for four years after whi... Read full biography
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