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Therese Concordia Maron

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Therese Concordia Maron
Self-portrait (1745)
Born
Therese Concordia Mengs

1725
DiedOctober 10, 1806(1806-10-10) (aged 80–81)
NationalityGerman
OccupationPainter
Spouse(s)Anton von Maron
(m. 1765)
RelativesAnton Raphael Mengs (brother)
Julia Charlotte Mengs (sister)
Anna Maria Mengs (niece)

Therese Concordia Maron (née Mengs) (1725 – October 10, 1806), was a German (Saxon) painter, for most of her life active in Rome. She was the elder sister of more known painter Anton Raphael Mengs.

Therese was born in northern Bohemian town of Ústí nad Labem (Template:Lang-de) into the Lutheran family of Danish painter Ismael Mengs, a hofmaler (court painter) at the court of Saxon-Polish electors and kings. Her birth in Bohemia was mere coincidence, because her father maintained an extramarital relationship with his housekeeper Charlotte Bormann and in an effort to conceal the birth of an illegitimate child, he decided to take the mistress under the pretext of "vacations" to the nearest bigger town abroad, namely to Ústí nad Labem (90 km upstream of the Elbe River), where she gave birth to daughter Theresa Concordia. After a few weeks, Mengs took his daughter and her mother back to Dresden, the Saxon capital, where they lived. (Three years later he made the same trick even with the birth of his son, Anton Raphael).[1]

In her 16 years she moved with her family to Rome, where married later (1765) an Austrian portrait painter and pupil of her brother, Anton von Maron. She painted a number of enamels, pastels, and miniatures, including a self-portrait and a portrait of her younger sister Julia. She died in Rome in 1806.

Maron was also active as a teacher; among her pupils were Apollonia Seydelmann, Francesca Bracci, her niece Anna Maria Mengs, and Sofia Clerc.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Polt, John H. R. (1997). "Anton Raphael Mengs in Spanish Literature". In Font, Jordi Aladró (ed.). Homenaje a Don Luis Monguió. Hispanic monographs: Series Homenajes 13. Newark, DE: Juan de la Cuesta. pp. 351–374. ISBN 978-0-936388-82-3.
  2. ^ Antonelli, Cesareo. "Sofia Clerk: pittore". Academia Nazionale di San Luca (in Italian). Retrieved January 24, 2019.

References