Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner
Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner  | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | Painting | 
| Style | Rococo | 


Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner (1702 in Ebbs, Tirol - 7 September 1761 in Augsburg) was an Austrian-German Rococo painter.
Life
He was born Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner in Tyrol and he learned glass painting in Salzburg. He moved to Augsburg and worked as a glass painter. The ceiling painting in the Sanctuary of the Holy Cross of the former Klosters Mountains is considered as his largest and most important work.[1]
Works
- Ceiling frescoes of the Sanctuary of St. Mary of Mount Carmel in Baitenhausen in Meersburg on Lake Constance, 1760
 - Ceiling frescoes in the nave of the Sanctuary of St. Maria Loreto in Westheim
 - The Martyrdom of St. Venantius of Camerino
 - Daily edification of a true Christian
 - Mark the Evangelist writing
 - The Holy. John I. and the Gothic King Theodoric
 - Drawings of Bible pictures in Historia veteris (ac novi) Testamenti Iconibus Expressa
 
References
- ^ "Baumgartner, Johann Wolfgang". Oxford Art Online. – via Oxford Art Online (subscription required) . Retrieved February 4, 2016.
 
Further reading
- Bruno Bushart, Friedrich Kaess: monastery Bergen Neuburg an der Donau and its frescoes by Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner . 1981
 - Peter Stoll and Heide-Maria Krauthauf: "Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner and the 'Holy Albert of Trapani' in the former Carmelite Schongauer". In: The Welf: Yearbook of the Historical Society Schongau - town and country 10 (2008/09), S. 177-194.
 - Peter Stoll: Anton Winter Gerst copied Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner . University Library, Augsburg 2013 (full text)
 
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Johann Wolfgang Baumgartner.