* 1863 Aschersleben
† 1911 München
Art movement: School of Munich; Post-Impressionism; Neue Künstlervereinigung München (Munich New Artist's Association).
Would you like to sell a work by Charles Johann Palmié?
Non-binding offerRegister now and receive offers
Ketterer Kunst
Sell successfully
Sell successfully
- Ketterer Kunst is leading in modern and contemporary art and the only auction house in the German speaking world listed among the worldwide 10 (top 7 according to artprice 2022).
- specializing in internationally sought after artists.
- Bespoke marketing concepts and targeted customer approach – worldwide.
- Personalized and individual service.
- Worldwide visibility for a successful sale of works by Charles Johann Palmié.
- Printed catalogs : we are the only auction house printing the evening sale catalogs in English and German langiage.
Charles Johann Palmié
Biography
Biography
Charles Johann Palmié was born at Aschersleben on 22 October 1893. At the age of fourteen, Palmié finished an apprenticeship as a decoration painter and worked in Dresden as a pupil of Rieck's, theatre decoration painter to the court, before beginning his studies at the Dresden Academy. Even then the aspiring young artist succeeded in making good use of the hands-on experience he had acquired by working on large-scale commissions: in 1883 what is now the Leonhardi-Museum in Dresden (then owned by the painter Eduard Leonhardi) was extensively renovated in the Romanticizing 19th-century style and was treated to a rich repainting by Palmié. The building was used for exhibitions and studios. In 1884 Palmié moved from Dresden to Munich, where he completed his training as a pupil of August Fink's. After his marriage to the flower painter Marie Kapferer in 1886, Palmié freelanced. Regular trips to the Alps, from the 1890s also to the Altmühltal Valley, the Wörnitz and the Danube, inspired Palmié to execute Neo-Impressionist paintings in large formats. Palmié was a founder-member of the Munich Neue Künstlervereinigung in 1909, which was headed by Wassily Kandinsky. Disagreements about art made Palmié leave the NKVM before its first exhibition in winter 1909. Only two years later Charles Palmié died in Munich on 15 July 1911. Before his untimely death, Palmié had made a name for himself as a landscape and still-life painter.
More Information