1929
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/8434/Hugo Mühlig.jpg)
Hugo Mühlig was a German Impressionist painter. From 1881, he lived in Düsseldorf as a painter of landscapes and genre scenes.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4246/GT6cbK8Z-kammRQ4Y_v25Isirj1ZaRyVDYge8m8pcYpNy1cbfBhKD02fdMS8nzxT_1714108182-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/4968/лгорпавчсми.jpg)
Robert Lebeck was an award-winning German photojournalist.
Lebeck became well known in 1960 after his report on the independence of the Congo "Afrika im Jahre Null" ("Africa in Year Zero") which included a photograph of an African man, Ambroise Boimbo pinching the ceremonial sword of Belgian King Baudouin. To this day that picture remains his "calling card".
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4246/GT6cbK8Z-kammRQ4Y_v25Isirj1ZaRyVDYge8m8pcYpNy1cbfBhKD02fdMS8nzxT_1714108182-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/4968/лгорпавчсми.jpg)
Robert Lebeck was an award-winning German photojournalist.
Lebeck became well known in 1960 after his report on the independence of the Congo "Afrika im Jahre Null" ("Africa in Year Zero") which included a photograph of an African man, Ambroise Boimbo pinching the ceremonial sword of Belgian King Baudouin. To this day that picture remains his "calling card".
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4246/GT6cbK8Z-kammRQ4Y_v25Isirj1ZaRyVDYge8m8pcYpNy1cbfBhKD02fdMS8nzxT_1714108182-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/4968/лгорпавчсми.jpg)
Robert Lebeck was an award-winning German photojournalist.
Lebeck became well known in 1960 after his report on the independence of the Congo "Afrika im Jahre Null" ("Africa in Year Zero") which included a photograph of an African man, Ambroise Boimbo pinching the ceremonial sword of Belgian King Baudouin. To this day that picture remains his "calling card".
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4246/GT6cbK8Z-kammRQ4Y_v25Isirj1ZaRyVDYge8m8pcYpNy1cbfBhKD02fdMS8nzxT_1714108182-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/4968/лгорпавчсми.jpg)
Robert Lebeck was an award-winning German photojournalist.
Lebeck became well known in 1960 after his report on the independence of the Congo "Afrika im Jahre Null" ("Africa in Year Zero") which included a photograph of an African man, Ambroise Boimbo pinching the ceremonial sword of Belgian King Baudouin. To this day that picture remains his "calling card".
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4246/GT6cbK8Z-kammRQ4Y_v25Isirj1ZaRyVDYge8m8pcYpNy1cbfBhKD02fdMS8nzxT_1714108182-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9495/VIL Paul Mathias Padua.jpg)
Paul Mathias Padua was a German painter. He felt committed to the tradition of Wilhelm Leibl, a realist who was highly esteemed by Adolf Hitler, and was extremely successful as an artist during the National Socialist era.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4209/sbqZPymtoGcdE2HpPq0gcMlE9JwPIE5PRYmiGTyrUk0leuLGU7QHgcFd1aHGXAx2_1712944030-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/16332/Serge Mendjisky3.jpg)
Serge Mendjisky, birth name Serge Bernard Mendrsisezky, is a French painter and photographer, a representative of Divisionism.
Serge was the son of the painter Maurice Mendjisky (1890-1951) and studied in the studios of Picasso, Sutin, Braque and Léger, each of whom influenced his work in their own way. After studying at the Paris School of Fine Arts, he quickly gained recognition and began exhibiting in Japan and the United States, choosing to use a combination of photography and painting.
In the 90's Mendjisky used macro photography, turning to pop art, and since 2000 he decided to use photography as his only means of expression. In the collage technique, he modified photographic images of the world's most famous cities, such as New York and Paris, creating new urban landscapes and formulating his multi-dimensional vision of the world.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4312/qwQrE1BFSnj3Qf5QI6L8iWIk3fk5bJc-qDdB72KGwIwgTKGhvUfeZvG02JFJEpA1_1716202946-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/15038/Marcia Jean Hafif.jpg)
Marcia Jean Hafif was an American artist known for her contributions to the Minimalist and Conceptual art movements. She began her artistic career in the 1950s, exploring various mediums and styles before finding her distinctive voice.
Hafif's work often focused on the exploration of color, light, and the essence of materials. She was particularly interested in the interplay between perception, process, and the physicality of paint. In the 1970s, Hafif embarked on her groundbreaking series titled "The Inventory," where she meticulously painted a series of monochromatic works, each dedicated to exploring a specific color. These paintings emphasized the qualities and variations of a single hue, challenging traditional notions of representation and expanding the possibilities of color as a subject matter.
Later in her career, Hafif extended her exploration of color to include a broader range of media, such as photography, film, sound, text, installation, and printmaking. She continued to push boundaries and experiment with different materials and processes, always striving to deepen her understanding of color's impact on perception and experience.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4312/qwQrE1BFSnj3Qf5QI6L8iWIk3fk5bJc-qDdB72KGwIwgTKGhvUfeZvG02JFJEpA1_1716202946-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4335/CtfH3LrjEUwczmzCJwjuZlBLd7HILl7SKAxlJa3HZZ2t9XHLIW6cz38PZGVpOEX6_1716382010-172x196_center_100.jpg)