Georg Tappert
1931 - 2021
Georg Tappert was a German painter and printmaker born in Berlin in 1880. He studied at the Kunstgewerbe- und Handwerkerschule in Berlin and later at the Académie Julian in Paris. He was associated with the Berlin Secession, an art association founded in 1898 that aimed to promote the artistic independence of its members.
Tappert's early works were influenced by French Post-Impressionism, but his style evolved towards Expressionism in the early 1910s. He was a member of the Neue Secession, a group of artists that split from the Berlin Secession in 1910, and he participated in the influential Sonderbund exhibition in Cologne in 1912.
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During World War I, Tappert served in the German army and was wounded in 1915. After the war, he became a professor at the Kunstgewerbe- und Handwerkerschule in Berlin, where he taught until 1933.
Tappert's work was banned by the Nazis in 1933 as "degenerate art," and he was dismissed from his teaching position. He continued to paint in private, but his output declined significantly in the later years of his life.
Georg Tappert died in Berlin in 1957, and his work is represented in numerous museum collections, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
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