Market in Rosswein (Translation)
Markt in Rosswein (Primary Title)

Conrad Felixmüller, German, 1897 - 1977 (Artist)

1920
German
Paintings
Works On Paper
Watercolor on laid paper
Sheet: 23 1/16 × 17 3/4 in. (58.58 × 45.09 cm)
2009.142
Not on view
Signed in graphite lower right: "Felixmüller 20."
Inscribed in graphite on verso lower left: "50/ (126.) E"
The Ludwig and Rosy Fischer Collection, Gift of the Estate of Anne R. Fischer
Exhibition of works from the Collection of Ludwig and Rosy Fischer, Knoxville: Knoxville Museum of Art, Jan. – June 4, 1995.

The Eye of the Collector: Ludwig and Rosy Fischer and the Rise of German Expressionist Art, Annapolis: St. John’s College, Aug. 25-Oct. 24, 1993.

Expressionismus und Exil: Die Sammlung Ludwig und Rosy Fischer, Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt: Jewish Museum, Aug. 29 - Oct. 28, 1990, no. 51, LS 86.

Selections from the Fischer Collection of German Expressionist Art, Lynchburg: Maier Museum of Art, Mar. 30 - May 8, 1989.

Selections from the Fischer Collection of German Expressionist Art, Newport News: Peninsula Fine Arts Center, Feb. 18 - Mar. 26, 1989.

German Expressionist Art: Selections from the Ludwig and Rosy Fischer Collection, Richmond: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Jan. 12 - Mar. 8, 1987, no. 63.
By 1922, Ludwig Fischer [1860-1922] and Rosy Fischer [1869-1926], Frankfurt am Main, Germany; [1] By 1926, Ernst Fischer [1896-1981] and Anne Fischer [1902-2008], Frankfurt am Main, Germany, by inheritance; [2] May 2009, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA), Richmond, by bequest of Anne R. Fischer, 2009. [3]  

[1] Ludwig and Rosy Fischer were art collectors in Frankfurt, Germany, who primarily collected contemporary German art between 1905 and 1925 at their home on Mendelssohnstrasse 73, Frankfurt am Main. Ludwig Fischer died on April 25, 1922. The Fischers acquired many of their works from the Ludwig Schames Gallery. Felixmüller showed in 1921 at Schames; however, due to lack of illustrations in the sales catalogues, and generalized titles, it is difficult to determine an exact date of acquisition.

Rosy died on February 27, 1926, while traveling in North Africa. (See Brandt, Fredrick R. German Expressionist Art: Ludwig and Rosy Fischer Collection, Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, 1987, pp. 1 - 11).

[2] In 1926, the Fischer collection was divided equally between Ludwig and Rosy Fischer's sons, Max Fischer (1893-1954) and Ernst Fischer (1896 – 1981). In 1934, Ernst and Anne Fischer fled Germany to the United States with their part of the collection, first to Rochester, New York and then settled in Richmond, Virginia in 1935. (See Brandt, 1987, pp. 1 -11.)

[3] Information in VMFA Curatorial and Registration files.
©artist or artist’s estate

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