Carl Johann Steinhäuser (3 July 1813 – 9 December 1879) was a noted German sculptor in the classical style.
Steinhäuser was born in Bremen, the eldest son of a wood carver and sculptor. There he studied in the School of Drawing under painter and illustrator Stephen Messerer, then under Christian Rauch at the Berliner Akademie der Künste in Berlin. From 1835 to 1863 he lived in Rome, where he studied with Bertel Thorvaldsen, then served as professor of art at Karlsruhe until his death.
Today he is best known for his Bremen memorials to Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers and Johann Smidt, his Weimar sculpture of Goethe mit der Psyche, and his Hermann and Dorothea in Karlsruhe. Steinhäuser's work is represented in the United States by the "Angel of the Resurrection" for the Burd Family Memorial, commissioned in 1849 for the interior of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Philadelphia,[1][2] and for a copy of his Orestes and Pylades marble sculpture at the Palace Park in Karlsruhe[3] erected by his former student Herman Kirn in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, in 1884.[4]
Among Steinhäuser's other students were Otto Lessing and Karl Friedrich Moest.
- Olbers Monument
- Memorial to Johann Smidt, Town Hall, Bremen
- Musician with a Violin
References
- ↑ "The Burd Monument (photograph)". J. Paul Getty Museum. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
- ↑ "Historical Art & Architecture". St. Stephen's Episcopal Church. Retrieved 2021-04-03.
- ↑ "Orestes and Pylades". Karlsruhe Culture and Tourism (German language). Retrieved 3 October 2020.
- ↑ Pohlsander, Hans A. (1 January 2010). German Monuments in the Americas: Bonds Across the Atlantic. Peter Lang. p. 123. ISBN 9783034301381. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
- Helke Kammerer-Grothaus, Carl Johann Steinhäuser. 1813-1879, ein Bildhauer aus Bremen von Helke Kammerer-Grothaus, Aschenbeck & Holstein, 2004. ISBN 978-3-932292-64-4.
- Artnet entry
- Philart.net entry
- Summers Place Auctions description