LUDWIG HOHLWEIN (1874-1949)
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OBERURSELER UMLAUFMOTOR / MOTORENFABRIK OBERURSEL. Circa 1915.
35x27 inches, 89x70 cm. Kornsand & Co., Frankfurt.
Condition B+ / B: chipping along sharp vertical and horizontal folds; minor tears and losses at edges; minor
foxing in margins and image; loss in lower left corner. Printed on thick paper.
Oberurseler Umlaufmotor was a company that manufactured rotary engines for automobiles, locomo-
tives and aircraft. The name comes from its location in the city of Oberursel, near Frankfurt. During
the first World War they were primarily designing aircraft engines, and their U.0 model, with seven
pistons, was used to power the Fokker E.I (the E stood for Eindecker, which means monoplane). Dur-
ing wartime, the motors on these aircraft were covered with a cowl. Here, with the artistic license
required to show consumers the powerful 7-cylinder engine, Hohlwein depicts the confidence of sol-
diers and an airman conversing in front of the aircraft. Hohlwein / Stuttgart 159.
[4,000/6,000]