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189:, then director of the academy and Denmark's leading architect in the late 18th century and now referred to as “The Father of Danish Classicism”. Lillie won both the academy's "little silver medallion" and the "large silver medallion" in 1775. Later, he won the little gold medallion in 1777, and the large gold medallion in 1779, the same year a fellow architecture student,
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In 1787 he was cited for neglect of duties as a teacher at the academy, and was refused a travel stipend, which should have been his due as recipient of the gold medallion eight years previously. His fellow gold medallion winner that same year and friend C.F. Hansen had also been refused a travel
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Economic conditions were hard for artists at the turn of the 19th century, with shriveling funds from the public coffers due to, among other things, the loss of
Christiansborg, the setting up of new residences at Amalienborg, and pending war, which took place in the early 19th century. After a
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tried to prevent his getting a license to run the family cabinetmaking workshop, which his recently deceased mother had run as a widow after the death of his father. The guild did not recognize him as having guild rights, because he had not received guild recognition for a
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Lillie worked as a substitute teacher in the academy's building class 1781-1782, and in 1783 took on a full-time position there as teacher, but never as professor, which meant that he could not become a member of the academy.
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awarded him all guild rights in 1779 because he had won the academy's large gold medallion. He received his trade license that year, and ran the workshop from 1784 to 1799.
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That same year, on
Harsdorff's recommendation, he was hired by the new director, Carsten Anker, as inspector and designer at The Royal Furniture Storehouse (
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The interior decoration in 1794-1795 of various apartments in Schack's Palace (today commonly referred to as
Christian IX's Palace) at
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He was resident architect for C.F. Hansen at the establishment of
Kastorf and Kramonshagen in Holstein in 1801-1802.
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The
Christiansborg fire of 1794 destroyed much of his work at the castle, although some individual pieces survived.
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Lillie became LĂĽbeck's chief architect in 1813. He died in LĂĽbeck in 1827 and is buried at St. JĂĽrgen cemetery.
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in LĂĽbeck, today the city's wedding registry office. The house and garden are also important in the art of
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cabinetmaker Georg
Friederich Lillie and his wife, Maria Eva Schils. He is presumed to have trained as a
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stipend, but was able to travel on account of a direct financial dispensation from
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Lillie became the director and a professor of architecture, perspective and geometry at the
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In 1788 Lillie applied for the job of city architect in
Copenhagen, but to no avail.
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in LĂĽbeck, now an art museum including Lillie's interior design (ca. 1800),
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His talents were also used for the interior design of apartments at
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In 1790 Lillie did the interior design for Crown Prince and Regent
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bankruptcy in 1798 he left
Copenhagen and Denmark, and moved to
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He married his second wife Julie
Meinier (Meunier) in France.
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and later became the domicile of the Munch collector and
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The mausoleum for Hereditary Princess Helene Paulowna,
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He lived with Johanna Catharina Haak starting in 1805.
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131:(20 March 1760 – 29 January 1827), also known as
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32:J. C. Lillie, painted in 1806 by J. B. Hauttmann
491:KID Kunst Index Danmark ("Art Index Denmark")
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550:Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts alumni
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185:ca. 1774-1780, and was a student of
166:Joseph Christian Lillie was born in
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466:Joseph Christian Lillie (1760-1827)
245:Christian Friedrich of Augustenborg
431:The manor house in Schönfeld near
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283:He travelled in Norway in 1793.
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540:Danish neoclassical architects
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442:The manor house for the von
361:The interior decoration for
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146:. His early career was in
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520:Danish furniture designers
498:Dansk biografisk Leksikion
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545:Designers from Copenhagen
468:(in German) Berlin 2008.
191:Christian Frederik Hansen
187:Caspar Frederik Harsdorff
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214:. The academy, under
197:Early career in Denmark
181:He was educated at the
162:Early life and training
129:Joseph Christian Lillie
20:Joseph Christian Lillie
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274:Christiansborg Palace
237:Christiansborg Palace
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278:Frederiksberg Palace
333:Freie Zeichenschule
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216:Johannes Wiedewelt
78:Schleswig-Holstein
535:Culture in LĂĽbeck
515:Danish architects
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352:Marienlyst Castle
144:interior designer
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68:(1827-01-29)
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437:Mecklenburg
417:(1804–1806)
415:Ludwigslust
345:Other works
288:Amalienborg
220:Chancellery
133:J.C. Lillie
85:Nationality
509:Categories
485:References
426:TravemĂĽnde
420:The first
311:TravemĂĽnde
168:Copenhagen
95:Occupation
52:Copenhagen
44:1760-03-20
408:Max Linde
356:Helsingør
309:hotel in
255:and King
247:in 1786.
152:Schleswig
140:architect
107:Buildings
98:Architect
390:Behnhaus
270:Frederik
156:Holstein
113:, LĂĽbeck
111:Behnhaus
422:Kurhaus
307:Kurhaus
276:and at
170:to the
148:Denmark
116:Kurhaus
56:Denmark
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439:(1820)
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404:patron
386:(1797)
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320:LĂĽbeck
172:master
89:Danish
74:LĂĽbeck
452:Mölln
450:near
448:Gudow
354:near
207:guild
142:and
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406:Dr.
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63:Died
38:Born
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