'Sarayburnu and Haliç''
An Istanbul work by Micheal Zeno-Dimer, an orientalist and war painter who is famous for his watercolor paintings and whose works are exhibited in the world's leading museums...
Watercolor on paper
34 x 61 cm
signed
Estimate: 150.000 TL - 200.000 TL
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MICHAEL ZENO DIEMER (1867 - 1939)
Michael Leno Dimer was born on 8 February 1867 in Munich which was then part of the Kingdom of Bavaria. In 1884, he enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, where he studied with Gabriel Hackl and Alexander von Liezen-Mayer. His fame initially derived from his impressive battle paintings. In 1894, over the course of six months, he worked in Innsbruck, where he created a 1000 square meter panoramic painting depicting the Battles of Bergisel (1809), in which forces led by Andreas Hofer defeated the armies of Napoleon and the Kingdom of Bavaria. It is currently on display at the Innsbrucker Riesenrundgemälde; one of only thirty surviving panoramas from that period. Another panorama from 1896 depicted the Battle of Bazeilles from the Franco-Prussian War. It was displayed at a specially constructed building in Mannheim and is now lost.
He created several works for the Deutsches Museum in Munich; including a Roman aqueduct for the hydraulic engineering display, a Medieval herb garden and the flight of a zeppelin (1909). In Stuttgart, for the "Ketterer", a restaurant at a brewery, he produced a series of fourteen large paintings on the history of Swabian emigration.
As a watercolorist, he produced numerous landscape paintings and maritime scenes, poster designs, and postcard motifs. He also worked as a musician and a composer. He died on 28 February 1939 in Oberammergau.