Fulltext
  • Fulltext
  • Place

Search for place, image id, term(s)

Only search for place

Search for GDR photos "Schauspieler or Künstler"

Pictures are searched.
Please wait!

 

Image Format

Colour

Reset all filters
Photo ID: 48476

Photo ID has been copied

Photo: Prof. Herbert Sandberg
     
Graphic artist, painter and artist Professor Herbert Sandberg on Platanenstrasse in the Pankow district of Berlin, East Berlin in the area of the former GDR, German Democratic Republic. Herbert Sandberg (* 18 April 1908 in Posen; † 18 March 1991 in the Pankow district of Berlin) was a graphic artist and caricaturist. He was best known for his caricatures in the magazine 'Ulenspiegel', which he edited, his Brecht sketches and his column 'Der freche Zeichenstift'. In the picture on the right is his wife Lilo Grahn (actress) in his house on Platanenstrasse in Berlin - Pankow. After studying at the Breslau School of Arts and Crafts in 1925/26 and at the State Academy of Arts and Crafts there under Otto Mueller, Herbert Sandberg worked for various Berlin newspapers from 1928 to 1933 (Berliner Tageblatt, Wahrer Jacob, etc.). In 1929 he joined the Association of Revolutionary Visual Artists (ARBKD). Due to his membership in the KPD (since 1931) and his active opposition to the Nazis, he was imprisoned in Brandenburg Penitentiary in 1934 on the charge of 'preparing for high treason'. From 1938 until the end of the war Sandberg was imprisoned in Buchenwald concentration camp as a Jew and communist. In 1944 he created 18 drawings from soot there, which he later published in the cycle A Friendship. After the Second World War, Sandberg became co-editor of the satirical magazine 'Ulenspiegel' with Guenther Weisenborn from December 1945 to August 195
Photo ID: 48477

Photo ID has been copied

Photo: Prof. Herbert Sandberg
     
Graphic artist, painter and artist Professor Herbert Sandberg on Platanenstrasse in the Pankow district of Berlin, East Berlin in the area of the former GDR, German Democratic Republic. Herbert Sandberg (* 18 April 1908 in Posen; † 18 March 1991 in the Pankow district of Berlin) was a graphic artist and caricaturist. He was best known for his caricatures in the magazine 'Ulenspiegel', which he edited, his Brecht sketches and his column 'Der freche Zeichenstift'. In the picture on the right is his wife Lilo Grahn (actress) in his house on Platanenstrasse in Berlin - Pankow. After studying at the Breslau School of Arts and Crafts in 1925/26 and at the State Academy of Arts and Crafts there under Otto Mueller, Herbert Sandberg worked for various Berlin newspapers from 1928 to 1933 (Berliner Tageblatt, Wahrer Jacob, etc.). In 1929 he joined the Association of Revolutionary Visual Artists (ARBKD). Due to his membership in the KPD (since 1931) and his active opposition to the Nazis, he was imprisoned in Brandenburg Penitentiary in 1934 on the charge of 'preparing for high treason'. From 1938 until the end of the war Sandberg was imprisoned in Buchenwald concentration camp as a Jew and communist. In 1944 he created 18 drawings from soot there, which he later published in the cycle A Friendship. After the Second World War, Sandberg became co-editor of the satirical magazine 'Ulenspiegel' with Guenther Weisenborn from December 1945 to August 195
Photo ID: 48479

Photo ID has been copied

Photo: Prof. Herbert Sandberg
     
Graphic artist, painter and artist Professor Herbert Sandberg on Platanenstrasse in the Pankow district of Berlin, East Berlin in the area of the former GDR, German Democratic Republic. Herbert Sandberg (* 18 April 1908 in Posen; † 18 March 1991 in the Pankow district of Berlin) was a graphic artist and caricaturist. He was best known for his caricatures in the magazine 'Ulenspiegel', which he edited, his Brecht sketches and his column 'Der freche Zeichenstift'. In the picture on the right is his wife Lilo Grahn (actress) in his house on Platanenstrasse in Berlin - Pankow. After studying at the Breslau School of Arts and Crafts in 1925/26 and at the State Academy of Arts and Crafts there under Otto Mueller, Herbert Sandberg worked for various Berlin newspapers from 1928 to 1933 (Berliner Tageblatt, Wahrer Jacob, etc.). In 1929 he joined the Association of Revolutionary Visual Artists (ARBKD). Due to his membership in the KPD (since 1931) and his active opposition to the Nazis, he was imprisoned in Brandenburg Penitentiary in 1934 on the charge of 'preparing for high treason'. From 1938 until the end of the war Sandberg was imprisoned in Buchenwald concentration camp as a Jew and communist. In 1944 he created 18 drawings from soot there, which he later published in the cycle A Friendship. After the Second World War, Sandberg became co-editor of the satirical magazine 'Ulenspiegel' with Guenther Weisenborn from December 1945 to August 195
Photo ID: 48480

Photo ID has been copied

Photo: Prof. Herbert Sandberg
     
Graphic artist, painter and artist Professor Herbert Sandberg on Platanenstrasse in the Pankow district of Berlin, East Berlin in the area of the former GDR, German Democratic Republic. Herbert Sandberg (* 18 April 1908 in Posen; † 18 March 1991 in the Pankow district of Berlin) was a graphic artist and caricaturist. He was best known for his caricatures in the magazine 'Ulenspiegel', which he edited, his Brecht sketches and his column 'Der freche Zeichenstift'. In the picture on the right is his wife Lilo Grahn (actress) in his house on Platanenstrasse in Berlin - Pankow. After studying at the Breslau School of Arts and Crafts in 1925/26 and at the State Academy of Arts and Crafts there under Otto Mueller, Herbert Sandberg worked for various Berlin newspapers from 1928 to 1933 (Berliner Tageblatt, Wahrer Jacob, etc.). In 1929 he joined the Association of Revolutionary Visual Artists (ARBKD). Due to his membership in the KPD (since 1931) and his active opposition to the Nazis, he was imprisoned in Brandenburg Penitentiary in 1934 on the charge of 'preparing for high treason'. From 1938 until the end of the war Sandberg was imprisoned in Buchenwald concentration camp as a Jew and communist. In 1944 he created 18 drawings from soot there, which he later published in the cycle A Friendship. After the Second World War, Sandberg became co-editor of the satirical magazine 'Ulenspiegel' with Guenther Weisenborn from December 1945 to August 195

Loading view. Please wait.
Next
Back