Emil Wolff




Emil Wolff (1802โ1879) was a 19th-century German sculptor and occasional artist in oil paints.
He is well-represented in galleries across Europe.
Life
He was born in Berlin on 2 March 1802. From 1815 he studied at the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin. He won a scholarship to study in Rome in 1822 under Bertel Thorwaldsen.[1]
In 1854 King Friedrich Wilhelm IV purchased "Najade" for erection at Sanssouci. This was removed in 1985 due to erosion but replaced with a replica in 2017.[2]
In 1865 he exhibited at the Dublin International Exhibition.[3]
He died in Rome on 29 September 1879.
Family
His maternal uncle was the sculptor Johann Gottfried Schadow.
Works
see[4] etc
- Midas as a Judge (1825)
 - Charitas (1830)
 - The Night (1830)
 - Telephos suckled by the Doe
 - Hebe and Ganymede (1834)
 - Diana after the Hunt (1838)
 - The Amazons
 - Prometheus (1844)
 - Jephtha and his Daughter (1858)
 - Psyche after Amor's Escape
 - Judith (1868)
 - Bertel Thorwaldsen
 - The Tambourine Beater
 - Johann Winckelmann
 - Barthold Georg Niebuhr
 - Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
 - Hermes
 - Youthful Satyr
 - Young Bacchus
 
References
- ^ Alfred Gotthold Meyer: Wolff, Emil . In: General German Biography (ADB). Vol. 44, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1898, pp. 28-31.
 - ^ Potsdamer Latest news from 12.8.17 author: Anne-Kathrin Fischer
 - ^ "Emil Wolff - Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951".
 - ^ "Emil Wolff | Artnet".