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Willy Gretor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Willy Gretor (c.1895)
Portrait of a Redhaired Boy

Willy Gretor, born Vilhelm Rudolf Julius Petersen (16 July 1868, in Wundlacken Castle, near Königsberg – 31 July 1923, in Copenhagen), was a Danish painter and art dealer, who spent most of his life in Germany and Paris.

Life and work

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His father, Hans Christian Petersen, was a merchant from Flensburg. He had his first art lessons in Copenhagen, from Niels Pedersen Mols [da] and Bertha Wegmann, at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. In 1889, he went to Lübeck. There, he became acquainted with members of the "Ibsenklub" (named after the playwright, Henrik Ibsen); a group of liberal young people who met to exchange ideas, about modern literature that had an aura of "mystery and scandal".[1]

Based on his correspondence, this led to a brief affair with Margarethe Gütschow [de], who later became an archaeologist, and an equally brief engagement to one of her cousins. This network of relationships also led to a group trip to Paris, during which he began an affair with the painter, Maria Schorer. For unknown reasons, they decided to take assumed names for their artworks. Maria became Maria Slavona, and he chose the name Willy Gretor. The actress known as Lilly Ackermann [de] was born from this liaison.

From 1890 to 1891, he held several exhibitions in Paris, which led him to his next affair, with the painter, Rosa Pfäffinger [de]. This time, however, the affair became marriage. One of their children was the journalist, Georg Gretor [de].[2]

He then largely gave up painting to work as an art dealer in England, France and Spain. In that capacity, he was involved as a middleman in the controversial sale of the wax bust, Flora, which was purchased by the Bode Museum in Berlin, from the English art dealer Murray Marks (1840-1918), in the belief that it was by Da Vinci. Its true authorship has yet to be established to everyone's satisfaction.[3]

For a short time, Frank Wedekind was Gretor's secretary. It is generally assumed that Gretor served as the prototype for the title character in Wedekind's play, The Marquis of Keith.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Alken Bruns: "Kultfigur und Bürgerschreck. Ibsenrezeption in Lübeck um 1890", In: Wolfgang Butt, Bernhard Glienke (Eds.): Der nahe Norden: Otto Oberholzer zum 65. Geburtstag; eine Festschrift. Lang, Frankfurt am Main; Bern; New York; Nancy 1985, ISBN 978-3-8204-5349-2, pp.125–138
  2. ^ Ulrike Wolff-Thomsen: Willy Gretor (1868–1923): seine Rolle im internationalen Kunstbetrieb und Kunsthandel um 1900, Ludwig, Kiel, 2006, ISBN 3-937719-33-4
  3. ^ Short biography of Murray Marks @ the Victoria and Albert Museum
  4. ^ Fritz Strich (Ed.): Frank Wedekind. Gesammelte Briefe., Georg Müller, 1924, pp.354 f.

Further reading

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  • Lilly Ackermann: Willy Grétor, das Urbild des „Marquis von Keith“. In: Uhu, Vol.3, #6 (March 1927), pp.55–59.
  • "Gretor, Willy". In: Ulrich Thieme, Fred. C. Willis (Eds.): Allgemeines Lexikon der Bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, Vol. 15: Gresse–Hanselmann. E. A. Seemann, Leipzig 1922, pp.3–4 (Online)
  • Ulrike Wolff-Thomsen: Willy Gretor (1868–1923). Seine Rolle im internationalen Kunstbetrieb und Kunsthandel um 1900, Ludwig, Kiel 2006, ISBN 3-937719-33-4
  • Raffaella Bucolo: "Eine Lübeckerin in Rom. Die Archäologin Margarete Gütschow (1871–1951)". In: Zeitschrift für Lübeckische Geschichte, Vol.96, 2016, pp.177–190.
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Media related to Willy Gretor at Wikimedia Commons