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Keywords page for Edmund Harburger ((1846 - 1906)), known for Painting, drawing, caricature, illustration. Showing associated keywords and tags.
Edmund Harburger KEYWORDS
1846 - 1906. Known for: Painting, drawing, caricature, illustration.
Edmund Harburger was a German artist born in 1846 in Eichstätt. He moved to Mainz in 1847 and worked as a bricklayer until 1865. He briefly studied at the Munich Polytechnic and then studied at the... Read full biography
Edmund Harburger was a German artist born in 1846 in Eichstätt. He moved to Mainz in 1847 and worked as a bricklayer until 1865. He briefly studied at the Munich Polytechnic and then studied at the Munich Academy from 1866 with Karl Raupp and Wilhelm Heinrich Lindenschmit the Elder. He undertook... Read full biography
Edmund Harburger was a German artist born in 1846 in Eichstätt. He moved to Mainz in 1847 and worked as a bricklayer until 1865. He briefly studied at the Munich Polytechnic and then studied at the Munich Academy from 1866 with Karl Raupp and Wilhelm Heinrich Lindenschmit the Elder. He undertook study trips to Holland, Tyrol, and Venice. He worked for the "Gartenlaube" and the "Fliegen Blatte" and sent his work to the Glass Palace in Munich. He died in Munich in 1906.... Read full biography
Edmund Harburger was a German artist born in 1846 in Eichstätt. He moved to Mainz in 1847 and worked as a bricklayer until 1865. He briefly studied at the Munich Polytechnic and then studied at the Munich Academy from 1866 with Karl Raupp and Wilhelm Heinrich Lindenschmit the Elder. He undertook study trips to Holland, Tyrol, and Venice. He worked for the "Gartenlaube" and the "Fliegen Blatte" and sent his work to the Glass Palace in Munich. He died in Munich in 1906.... Read full biography
Edmund Harburger was a German artist born in 1846 in Eichstätt. He moved to Mainz in 1847 and worked as a bricklayer until 1865. He briefly studied at the Munich Polytechnic and then studied at the Munich Academy from 1866 with Karl Raupp and Wilhelm Heinrich Lindenschmit the Elder. He undertook study trips to Holland, Tyrol, and Venice. He worked for the "Gartenlaube" and the "Fliegen Blatte" and sent his work to the Glass Palace in Munich. He died in Munich in 1906.
