Arnold Rönnebeck was a German-born American modernist artist and museum administrator. He was a vital member of both the European and American avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century before settling in Denver, Colorado. Rönnebeck was a sculptor and painter, but is best known for his lithographs that featured a range of subjects including New York cityscapes, New Mexico and Colorado landscapes and Native American dances.
Arnold Rönnebeck working on Grief model, 1926, Omaha, Nebraska, unidentified photographer. Arnold Rönnebeck and Louise Emerson Rönnebeck papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
Fireplace in La Fonda Hotel, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1929
Hodges Memorial, Fairmount Cemetery, Denver 1929
Nassau, Rhineland-Palatinate
Nassau is a town located in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It lies on the lower course of the Lahn River, on the mouth of the Mühlbach, between Limburg an der Lahn and the spa town of Bad Ems, and is located in the Nassau Nature Park, surrounded by the Westerwald to the north and the Taunus to the south. The town is on the German-Dutch holiday road, the Orange Route. As of 2021, it had a population of 4,592.
Nassau, Rhineland-Palatinate
Nassau Castle—ancestral seat of the House of Nassau—above the Lahn valley. The lordship associated with Nassau Castle was the namesake of numerous other entities called "Nassau".
Nassau in Matthäus Merian's Topographia Hassiae, in 1655. The city with the two castles Nassau Castle and Stein Castle (de: Steinsche Burg, now only a ruin) on the other side of the Lahn.
Nassau city hall