Friedrich Specht
Friedrich Specht (6 May 1839, in Lauffen am Neckar – 12 June 1909, in Stuttgart), was a German painter and natural history illustrator. He held his first exhibition at the Stuttgart Art Academy. He provided illustrations of animals and landscapes for a large number of zoology and veterinary science publications, notably for the first edition of Brehms Tierleben (1864–69) conceived by Alfred Edmund Brehm, Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (1890—1907), Carl Vogt's Die Säugetiere in Wort und Bild (1883–89) and Richard Lydekker's Royal Natural History (1894–96). His brothers were the wood engraver Carl Gottlob Specht and the wildlife painter August Specht (1849–1923).[1]
He was responsible for the lion's head on Adolf Gnauth 's memorial to the fallen warriors of Stuttgart.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ "Specht, Friedrich 1839-1909 [WorldCat Identities]".
- ^ "Boris Wilnitsky Fine Art - Homepage". www.wilnitsky.com. Archived from the original on 2012-04-05. Retrieved 2011-12-04.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Friedrich Specht at Wikimedia Commons
- Literature by and about Friedrich Specht in the German National Library catalogue
- Friedrich Specht
- The Natural History of Animals (online)
- 19th-century German painters
- 19th-century German male artists
- German male painters
- 20th-century German painters
- 20th-century German male artists
- German sculptors
- German male sculptors
- German lithographers
- 1839 births
- 1909 deaths
- 20th-century German sculptors
- 19th-century German sculptors
- 20th-century German printmakers
- 20th-century lithographers