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Syrius Eberle


Syrius Eberle (9 December 1844 – 12 April 1903) was a German sculptor and art professor.

Eberle was born in Pfronten, Allgäu, the son of a carpenter. He grew up in the Stapferhaus in Pfronten. He married the daughter of the lithographer Thomas Driendl (1805-1859), also from Pfronten.

Eberle first trained as a cabinet maker, and then studied from 1866 to 1872 at the Königliche Kunstakademie ("Royal Academy of Arts") in Munich. From 1884 he was himself a professor in the department of religious sculpture. Among his students were Georg Pezold,Heinrich Düll,Heinrich Waderé, Johann Vierthaler, Max Heilmaier, Georg Wrba, Georg Busch, Clemens Buscher, Josef Rauch, Bruno Diamant, Josef Flossmann, August Drumm, Emil Dittler and Ignatius Taschner.

Ludwig II, King of Bavaria, gave Eberle several commissions for decorations for his newly built castles, and also for single figures, groups, panels, and almost all his carriages and sledges.

Eberle created the former war memorial in Kempten, which in his time stood on the site of the present bus station. The bronze figures were melted down during World War II.

In 1889 his design in the competition for a national monument to the Brothers Grimm won only third prize. The organisers disagreed however about the design that won first prize, by the sculptor Max Wiese, whereupon they sought the opinion of Wilhelm Grimm's son, the art and literary historian Herman Grimm of Berlin. He decided on Eberle's design, and the commission for the monument was therefore given to him. On 18 October 1896 the formal unveiling of the monument took place.

During the years 1890-1892 Eberle made the four pylons for the Ludwigsbrücke ("Ludwig Bridge") in Munich, as well as the 1890 monument in the Ottostrasse to Franz Xaver Gabelsberger, the inventor of stenography.


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