Carl Grossberg was born in Elberfeld/Wuppertal on September 6, 1894. At  the age of nineteen, the artist began to study architecture at the  universities of Aachen and Darmstadt. His conscription to the military  forced Carl Grossberg to interrupt his studies.
Carl Grossberg, Steam Boiler with Bat, 1928
In 1919 he continued  to study under Walter Klemm at the "Hochschule für bildende Künste".  From 1919 to 1921 he studied under Lyonel Feiniger at the Bauhaus in  Weimar, where he trained in painting, decorative painting and spatial  design. In 1921 Grossberg undertook extensive study trips to Southern  Germany and settled near Würzburg. 
 Carl Grossberg, Central Station in Cologne, 1927
In 1927 Grossberg again  traveled a lot to paint his typical machine pictures, industrial  landscapes and cityscapes. He began to receive more and more commissions  form industry, for instance in 1932 from the Norta wallpaper factory in  the Harz region and in 1937 from the baking-goods firm Oetker in  Bielefeld, where he moved into his own studio. From 1933/34 Grossberg's  interest in technology and industry began to assume encyclopaedic  dimensions. He set himself the goal of painting the most important types  of industries and industial plants in Germany, calling this undertaking  his "Industrial Plan". 
Carl Grossberg, Spinning Mill, circa 1936
The Nazi regime and the approaching war lead  to a dramatic deterioration in his commissions, so that he tried to use  various connections in America to realize his plan. As a reserve  officer, Carl Grossberg was not allowed to leave the country and  therefore was not given permission to travel to the US in 1939. That  same year, Grossman was called up for active duty. 
Carl Grossberg, Muntplein, 1930s
Those last years  left him virtually no time to paint. Carl Grossmann died in a car crash in the  forest of Compiègne near Laon on October 19, 1940.
More of his works can be seen here on my Flickr page. 




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