• DEUTSCH
  • gallery
  • exhibition
  • publications
  • gallery artists
  • art fairs
  • press
  • art-dealing
  • news
  • contact
  • Valerio Adami
  • Hans-Peter Adamski
  • Jordi Alcaraz
  • Georg Baselitz
  • Leonard Baskin
  • Willi Baumeister
  • Max Beckmann
  • Peter Blake
  • Georges Braque
  • Werner Büttner
  • Marc Chagall
  • Giorgio de Chirico
  • Chuck Close
  • Lovis Corinth
  • William N. Copley
  • Walter Dahn
  • Alan Davie
  • Martin Denker
  • André Derain
  • Otto Dix
  • Jiri Georg Dokoupil
  • Jean Dubuffet
  • Ulrich Erben
  • Jean Fautrier
  • Lyonel Feininger
  • Konrad Felixmüller
  • Ludwig Meidner
  • Paula Modersohn-Becker
  • Otto Mueller
  • David Nicholson
  • Mimmo Paladino
  • Thomas Palme
  • Philip Pearlstein
  • Peter Phillips
  • Francis Picabia
  • Pablo Picasso
  • Sigmar Polke
  • Anton Räderscheidt
  • George Rickey
  • Larry Rivers
  • Georges Rouault
  • Christian Schad
  • Grete Schick
  • Rudolf Schlichter
  • Georg Scholz
  • Louis Soutter
  • Frank Stella
  • Hans Uhlmann
  • Andy Warhol
  • Aloys Zötl
  • Christina Feuser
  • George Grosz
  • Thomas Grünfeld
  • Chris Hipkiss
  • David Hockney
  • Howard Hodgkin
  • Ferdinand Hodler
  • Karl Hubbuch
  • Neil Jenney
  • Alexander Kanoldt
  • Howard Kanowitz
  • Ernst-Ludwig Kirchner
  • Per Kirkeby
  • Konrad Klapheck
  • Paul Klee
  • Astrid Klein
  • Käthe Kollwitz
  • Oskar Kokoschka
  • Frantisek Kupka
  • Henri Laurens
  • Uwe Lausen
  • Maryan
  • André Masson

Galerie Michael Haas

Karl Hubbuch

*21st November 1891 in Karlsruhe (GER)
+ 26th December 1978 in Karlsruhe (GER)

Hubbuch is a Versimo painter, and graphic artist, which is a special form of the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity). He studied together with George Grosz in Berlin an in the early 1920s he worked on socially critical drawings and lithographs. Between 1928 and 1933 and after the Second World War between 1947 and 1957 he was professor at the Akademie in Karlsruhe. In 1965 he was guest of honour at the Villa Massimo in Rome.
Die Bardame Erna (barmaid Erna), ca. 1930 <br> oil on canvas<br> signed and initialed <br> 96,2 x 66 cm
Die Bardame Erna (barmaid Erna)
1930