Heinrich Repke


Heinrich Repke was a German painter. He belonged to the Wiedenbrücker Schule school of arts.
Until 1895, Heinrich Repke was trained as an ornamental painter in the studio of Georg Goldkuhle in Wiedenbrück. He was trained as a portrait painter in the same studio before studying at the Dusseldorf Academy of Arts in 1899. He already returned to Wiedenbrück in 1900 though in order to finish the works of his deceased master Georg Goldkuhle. In 1907, Repke opened a studio for religious art.
In the time of National Socialism, four of his paintings were exhibited at the Great German Arts Exhibition in Munich. Adolf Hitler bought the peasant painting Der weiße Truthahn for a price of 750 reichsmark in 1938, and Robert Ley acquired the still life Schläft ein Lied in allen Dingen for 3,000 reichsmark in 1942.
Repke's son Willi was a painter as well and is considered the last representative of the Wiedenbrücker Schule school of arts.
In Rheda-Wiedenbrück and in Werne, streets are named after Repke.