Adolf Oberländer
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Adam Adolf Oberländer (October 1, 1845, Regensburg—May 29, 1923, Munich) was a German caricaturist.
He was born at Ratisbon, but after 1847 lived in Munich. He studied painting at the Munich Academy under Karl von Piloty, and soon discovered that the true expression of his genius was in the field of caricature and comic drawings. He joined the staff of the Fliegende Blätter, to which he became a constant contributor. Unlike Wilhelm Busch, whose aim was the utmost simplicity of line and whose drawings form a running commentary to the legend, Oberlnder's work is essentially pictorial, and expressive in itself, without the extraneous aid of the written line. Among his best drawings are his parodies on the style of well-known painters, such as the Variations on the Kissing Theme. His works have been collected in the Oberländer-Album, published by Braun and Schneider in Munich, and reprinted a number of times, most recently by Rosenheimer in 1982. (ISBN 3475523590)
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain. The article is available here.