Max Radler PRICE CHARTS
1904 Breslau, Germany - 1971 Munich, Germany. Known for: Landscape paintings.
Max Fritz Adolf Radler was a German painter, caricaturist, and illustrator born in 1904 in Breslau (Wroclaw) and died in 1971 in Munich. He was a representative of the "New Objectivity" movement and... Read full biography
Max Fritz Adolf Radler was a German painter, caricaturist, and illustrator born in 1904 in Breslau (Wroclaw) and died in 1971 in Munich. He was a representative of the "New Objectivity" movement and began his career with apprenticeships in plastering, carpentry, sculpting, and decorative painting.... Read full biography
Max Fritz Adolf Radler was a German painter, caricaturist, and illustrator born in 1904 in Breslau (Wroclaw) and died in 1971 in Munich. He was a representative of the "New Objectivity" movement and began his career with apprenticeships in plastering, carpentry, sculpting, and decorative painting. He later studied under Georg Schrimpf and Otto Grassl at the School of Arts and Crafts in Munich. Radler was a member of the "Group of Jury Free" and worked for the Great German Art Exhibition in the... Read full biography
Max Fritz Adolf Radler was a German painter, caricaturist, and illustrator born in 1904 in Breslau (Wroclaw) and died in 1971 in Munich. He was a representative of the "New Objectivity" movement and began his career with apprenticeships in plastering, carpentry, sculpting, and decorative painting. He later studied under Georg Schrimpf and Otto Grassl at the School of Arts and Crafts in Munich. Radler was a member of the "Group of Jury Free" and worked for the Great German Art Exhibition in the House of German Art in Munich during 1941-43. He lost his studio in a bombing raid in 1945 but continued to work for various publications such as the Freitag-Verlag, "Schwabinger Bilderbogen," "Ping-Pong," and "Simplizissimus." Radler also worked for... Read full biography
Max Fritz Adolf Radler was a German painter, caricaturist, and illustrator born in 1904 in Breslau (Wroclaw) and died in 1971 in Munich. He was a representative of the "New Objectivity" movement and began his career with apprenticeships in plastering, carpentry, sculpting, and decorative painting. He later studied under Georg Schrimpf and Otto Grassl at the School of Arts and Crafts in Munich. Radler was a member of the "Group of Jury Free" and worked for the Great German Art Exhibition in the House of German Art in Munich during 1941-43. He lost his studio in a bombing raid in 1945 but continued to work for various publications such as the Freitag-Verlag, "Schwabinger Bilderbogen," "Ping-Pong," and "Simplizissimus." Radler also worked for the Great Art Exhibition in Dresden in 1949 and the Great Art Exhibition in the House of Art in Munich in 1960. He was a member of the "Neue Gruppe Mü... Read full biography
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