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Harro Magnussen

Harro Magnussen (14 May 1861 – 3 November 1908) was a German sculptor.

Early life, education, and training

Magnussen was born in Hamm, and received his first lessons in drawing, modelling and carving wood from his father, the painter Christian Carl Magnussen. In 1882, he began his formal training in Munich with Nikolaus Gysis, Gabriel von Hackl and Ludwig von Löfftz. Despite being in Munich, he was most impressed by works from the Berliner Bildhauerschule (Berlin School of Sculpture) and went there in 1888, where he obtained a position in the studios of Reinhold Begas, remaining for five years.

Career

In 1889, he produced a bust of Otto von Bismarck that sold over 1,000 copies in plaster and bronze over the next ten years. He became a freelance sculptor in 1893 and entered several competitions for contracts, but with little success. In 1899, his smaller works attracted the attention of Kaiser Wilhelm II, who commissioned him to do a figure of the dying Frederick the Great. This finally brought him to public attention and he was awarded one of the coveted commissions for Wilhelm's ambitious Siegesallee project. His work on that project earned him the Order of the Crown, Class IV.

He committed suicide in Grunewald by asphyxiation with gas. Due to "suggestive evidence" (not specified), his death was briefly investigated as a possible murder by strangulation.

Books

Selected major sculptural works

Gallery

References

Further reading

  • Peter Bloch, Sibylle Einholz: Ethos & Pathos – Die Berliner Bildhauerschule 1786–1914. Berlin 1990 (Exhibition catalog), Mann, Berlin,
  • Peter Bloch, Waldemar Grzimek: Die Berliner Bildhauerschule im neunzehnten Jahrhundert. – Das klassische Berlin, Berlin 1978 (New edition, 1994) Propyläen-Verlag, Vienna,
  • Uta Lehnert: Der Kaiser und die Siegesallee – Réclame Royale. Dietrich Reimer, Berlin 1998,
  • Bernhard Maaz: Nationalgalerie Berlin. Das XIX. Jahrhundert – Catalog of the sculpture collection, Berlin 2006
  • Eckart Schörle: Harro Magnussen (1861–1908) – Ein Bildhauer der Jahrhundertwende zwischen Anpassung und Eigensinn. In: Nordelbingen (periodical), Vol.71. 2002. Pgs.75–110

External links