Ferdinand Leeke (7 April 1859 – 1923) was a German Painter, famous for his depictions of scenes from Wagnerian Operas. A native of Burg bei Magdeburg, Germany, he studied at the Munich Academy under Ludwig von Herterich (1843–1905) and Sándor Liezen-Mayer, a genre and historical painter, and with Alexander von Wagner (1838–1919), a Hungarian genre and landscape painter.
Around 1889, Siegfried Wagner, the son of the composer Richard Wagner, commissioned Leeke to paint a series of paintings showing scenes from ten operas by Wagner.
Wagner Pictures
- Rienzi: Act IV, Scene II
- The Flying Dutchman: Act III, Finale
- Tannhauser: Act III, Scene I.
- Lohengrin: Act III, Finale
- The Rheingold: Scene II
- The Valkyrie: Act I.
- Siegfried: Act II
- Götterdämmerung: Act III
- Tristan and Isolde: Act II
- The Mastersingers of Nuremberg: Act III
Gallery
- The Mermaid and the Satyr (1917)
- Tristan und Isolde
- Lohengrin
- Wotan and Brünnhilde (1930)
- Lohengrin (1916)
References
- Horizon, vol 23, p242
- "19th Century Paintings - Ferdinand Leeke - Dorotheum". www.dorotheum.com. Archived from the original on 2018-07-03. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
- "Ferdinand Leeke". Wagner's Ring. 4 June 2016.