Lina Krieger
Lina Krieger, Portrait of Aleksander Tomasz Mazaraki, 1817
Lina (Johanna Caroline Lina) Krieger (Krüger, Krueger) (born February 1802 or 1803 in Forst (Lausitz) on the Nysa Łużycka, died on July 7, 1884 in Dresden) - German painter on the borderline of Classicism and Romanticism, active in Warsaw during the Kingdom of Poland.
She was the daughter of painter Friedrich Christian Krieger, a graduate of the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden. Her brother Gustav Ferdinand Krieger also worked as a painter.
She was a pupil of her father, with whom she stayed in Warsaw in 1815-1817, specializing in pastel portraits. Together they ran a workshop, among others. in the Potkański Palace at ul. Long. From this period comes Alexander Tomas Mazaraki's portrait, which shows a high level of art in portraiture (at a young age). Probably it was in Warsaw that she started her practice as a professional painter.
After she left the Kingdom of Poland, she settled with her family in Dresden. In time, she became fully independent (her father died in 1832), which was very rare among female artists at that time; it seems she never got married. She presented her works at academic art exhibitions in Berlin (1824, 1826, 1828, 1832), Dresden (1822-1853) and in Wrocław (1820, 1822). In this longest German period she was known mainly as a painter of portraits (oil and pastel) and pastel copies of works of old Italian and Dutch masters (most often from the collections of the Dresden Gallery). Bibliography
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