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Hermann David Salomon Corrodi

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Hermann David Salomon Corrodi

Birth
Frascati, Città Metropolitana di Roma Capitale, Lazio, Italy
Death
30 Jan 1905 (aged 60)
Rome, Città Metropolitana di Roma Capitale, Lazio, Italy
Burial
Rome, Città Metropolitana di Roma Capitale, Lazio, Italy Add to Map
Plot
Building; Stone: S1662; Tomb: 2426
Memorial ID
View Source
Herman Corrodi was a Swiss Painter. He was the son of Salomon Corrodi. A New York Times obituary indicates that Hermann was born in Zurich, however his grave marker indicates that he was born in Frascati, which is near Rome.

Corrodi studied at the Accademia di S. Luca under his father, Salomon Corrodi (1810–1892) and in Paris (1872). He received commissions for history paintings from the British royal family and was acquainted with most of the European royalty of the time, including a friendship with Queen Victoria[4] and traveled widely in the Far East, including Egypt, Syria, Cyprus and Istanbul, which provided the subject matter for many of his paintings.

He is the brother of Arnold Corrodi. Originally a landscape painter in the academic style, much of Hermann's work is also typical of the Orientalism style of the 19th century. In 1893 he was knighted 'Accademico di Merito' by the Accademia di San Luca where he had been a professor.

"A Loss To Pictorial Art.
The pictorlal, art of Europe, and especially of Italy, has suffered considerable loss during the present week. Two grand and noble figures of artists passed away in Rome on the same day January 30. these were Hermann Corrodi and Pietro Vanni, and the German revived art of a generation ago has lost, two days later, one of its most noted and excellent mem bers, Oswald Aschenbach, of Dusseldorf.

Of these artists the most widely known is Hermann Corrodi, the descendant of a family of Italian origin, which on account of religious difficulties left Italy, seeking a refuge first in Germany and then in Switzerland, where they could practlce their Protestantism without annoyance. The father of the late Corrodi came to Rome early in the last century and established himself here as a water-color painter. Hermann, who has just died, was born In the little town of Frascati, 12 miles from Rome. He inherited the talent of his father, and every encouragement and assistance to the development of his artistic faculties were given him. Like several other Roman artists, he was gifted with eye-memory, certain effects in nature and certain Impressions of subjects and land scapes remained clearly pictured in his min from the age of 6 years, and 20 years afterward he painted what he considered one of his best pictures from an impression received at that early age.

Like most other painters, Hermann Corrodi desired to study the works of contemporary painters In other countries. He, with his younger brother Arnold, was sent to Germany ; and they also passed some time with the painter Calame at Geneva. But it was in Paris that they felt themselves most benefited. There they were possessed with a great enthusiasm for the French school, and from this time onward there Is a complete change in their treatment of subjects and mode of work.

Hermann became the painter of poetic landscapes. The Mediterranean, with its blue waters and sun-bleached shores, the life and motion and color of processions in the little cities on religious festivals and views near Rome In the ever-changing, ever-beautiful campagna, formed the choice subjects of Corrodi's brush. The Queen of Saxony bought his "Procession in Ischia," and Indeed his best works have gone into royal dwellings. A tour to Cairo and the banks of the Nile lent an Oriental glow to his brush, which gave a brilliancy and warmth to his treatment of sunshine. The Khedive of Egypt commissioned him to make a series of pictures for which he made the studies while he was in that land and completed them at Rome. "The Baths of the Harem," the " Carpet Bazar," "Sunset at Gezireh," "Inundation of the Nile" and other like themes demonstrated a new power of painting. Syria and the Holy Land were also visited, and Jerusalem, Bethlehem, the Dead Sea and its environs furnished him with subjects for many pictures."
Source: The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 19 February 1905, Sunday. Page 5.
Herman Corrodi was a Swiss Painter. He was the son of Salomon Corrodi. A New York Times obituary indicates that Hermann was born in Zurich, however his grave marker indicates that he was born in Frascati, which is near Rome.

Corrodi studied at the Accademia di S. Luca under his father, Salomon Corrodi (1810–1892) and in Paris (1872). He received commissions for history paintings from the British royal family and was acquainted with most of the European royalty of the time, including a friendship with Queen Victoria[4] and traveled widely in the Far East, including Egypt, Syria, Cyprus and Istanbul, which provided the subject matter for many of his paintings.

He is the brother of Arnold Corrodi. Originally a landscape painter in the academic style, much of Hermann's work is also typical of the Orientalism style of the 19th century. In 1893 he was knighted 'Accademico di Merito' by the Accademia di San Luca where he had been a professor.

"A Loss To Pictorial Art.
The pictorlal, art of Europe, and especially of Italy, has suffered considerable loss during the present week. Two grand and noble figures of artists passed away in Rome on the same day January 30. these were Hermann Corrodi and Pietro Vanni, and the German revived art of a generation ago has lost, two days later, one of its most noted and excellent mem bers, Oswald Aschenbach, of Dusseldorf.

Of these artists the most widely known is Hermann Corrodi, the descendant of a family of Italian origin, which on account of religious difficulties left Italy, seeking a refuge first in Germany and then in Switzerland, where they could practlce their Protestantism without annoyance. The father of the late Corrodi came to Rome early in the last century and established himself here as a water-color painter. Hermann, who has just died, was born In the little town of Frascati, 12 miles from Rome. He inherited the talent of his father, and every encouragement and assistance to the development of his artistic faculties were given him. Like several other Roman artists, he was gifted with eye-memory, certain effects in nature and certain Impressions of subjects and land scapes remained clearly pictured in his min from the age of 6 years, and 20 years afterward he painted what he considered one of his best pictures from an impression received at that early age.

Like most other painters, Hermann Corrodi desired to study the works of contemporary painters In other countries. He, with his younger brother Arnold, was sent to Germany ; and they also passed some time with the painter Calame at Geneva. But it was in Paris that they felt themselves most benefited. There they were possessed with a great enthusiasm for the French school, and from this time onward there Is a complete change in their treatment of subjects and mode of work.

Hermann became the painter of poetic landscapes. The Mediterranean, with its blue waters and sun-bleached shores, the life and motion and color of processions in the little cities on religious festivals and views near Rome In the ever-changing, ever-beautiful campagna, formed the choice subjects of Corrodi's brush. The Queen of Saxony bought his "Procession in Ischia," and Indeed his best works have gone into royal dwellings. A tour to Cairo and the banks of the Nile lent an Oriental glow to his brush, which gave a brilliancy and warmth to his treatment of sunshine. The Khedive of Egypt commissioned him to make a series of pictures for which he made the studies while he was in that land and completed them at Rome. "The Baths of the Harem," the " Carpet Bazar," "Sunset at Gezireh," "Inundation of the Nile" and other like themes demonstrated a new power of painting. Syria and the Holy Land were also visited, and Jerusalem, Bethlehem, the Dead Sea and its environs furnished him with subjects for many pictures."
Source: The Baltimore Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. 19 February 1905, Sunday. Page 5.

Inscription

HIER RUHT
HERMANN CORRODI
GEB.FRASCATI.23.JULI.1884.MALER.GEST.ROM.31.JAN.1905
----------------------
WIR HABEN HIER KEINE BLEIBENDE STADT,
SONDERN DIE ZUKÜNFTIGE SUCHEN WIR
EBR.13.14

Gravesite Details

Italy



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