(b Karlsruhe, 21 Nov 1891; d Karlsruhe, 26 Dec 1979). German painter, draughtsman, printmaker and teacher. He studied at the Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden K?nste in Karlsruhe (1908-12), where he became friendly with Rudolf Schlichter and Georg Scholz (1890-1945). From 1912 to 1914 he studied portraiture and attended life classes under Emil Orlik at the teaching institute of the Kunstgewerbemuseum in Berlin. After World War I he was a postgraduate student of Ernst W?rtenberger at the Kunstschule in Karlsruhe, studying etching, woodcutting and illustration. Hubbuch's concise drawings and etchings are the most significant part of his output: like those of Otto Dix and George Grosz they are full of social criticism, but they are more briskly executed. In innumerable studies he recorded situations typical of the period, particularly scenes showing human weaknesses and life in the city (e.g. The Dream of the Tietz Girls, etching, 1921; see 1981-2 exh. cat., p. 123). Naive narrative pictures from the immediate post-war period were followed after 1922 by the critical, objective images for which Hubbuch is best known, among them Knowing and Blind (etching, 1922; see 1981-2 exh. cat., p. 130), which is closely related to his 14 etchings for an edition of Goethe's Faust (Karlsruhe, 1924; see 1981-2 exh. cat., pp. 128-9).
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