Hungarian Artists. Part 2.

In this blog I am looking at the lives and works of a talented Hungarian family of painters.

Károly Ferenczy

Károly Ferenczy is considered one of the most important pioneers of Hungarian Modernism,    He was the son of Ida Graenzenstein and the Austrian railway construction official Karel Freund, who moved to Budapest with the construction company. Ferenczy was born in Vienna on February 8th 1862 and soon after his birth, his mother died.

Boys throwing Stones by Károly Ferenczy (1890)

Boys Throwing Stones was a major work completed by Ferenczy in 1890, whilst he was living in the River Danube town of Szentendre, having returned from Paris and his studies at the Académie Julian.  The setting is a barren landscape which had a sense of melancholia to the work and adds a gloomy backdrop to the three boys throwing stones into the river.  There is not one bright spot of colour and it is the shades of the pearly grey which he used for the water that lightens the rest of the dull earthly colours.

In Front of the Posters by Károly Ferenczy (1891)

Károly Ferenczy first studied law and completed his economics degree at the University of Vienna. In 1885 Ferencszy married a fellow artist and distant cousin, Olga Fialka who was twelve years older than him.  She studied painting under Jan Matejko in Kraków and went on to study under August Eisenmenger in Vienna. She was known for her paintings and book illustrations.

Portrait of Artist’s Wife by Károly Ferenczy (1891)

After she married Károly Ferenczy, the couple went on to have three children. With the birth of the children, Fialka turned her attention away from her art and focused on looking after the family.  The couple’s first child Valér Ferenczy, who was born in 1885, became a painter and printmaker. In 1890 Olga gave birth to twins, Béni Ferenczy, who went on to became a famous sculptor and Noémi Ferenczy, who became an equally well-known textile artist.

Triple Portrait by Károly Ferenczy (1911)

Károly Ferenczy‘s three children, his son Valér, painter and graphic artist, and the twins Béni , painter and graphic artist and Noémi, a painter who established tapestry in Hungary.

Noémi with Let-down Hair by Károly Ferenczy (1903)

In 1885 Károly enrolled at the Art Academy of Naples (Accademia di Belle Arti), but the following year moved to Munich. Ferenczy studied art in Budapest at the Academy of Fine Arts where his Hungarian tutors were Bertalan Székely the history and portrait painter who worked in the Romantic and Academic styles. and Gyula Benczúr who specialized in portraits and historical scenes. Benczúr is now looked upon as the greatest Hungarian masters of “historicism”, a term used to encompass artistic styles that draw their inspiration from recreating historic styles or imitating the work of historic artists and artisans. Ferencszy was living in Hungry at a period when the country was undergoing a cultural renaissance, and Ferenczy became part of a generation of artists eager to explore new artistic ideas and break away from academic conventions.

Birdsong by Károly Ferenczy (1893)

Károly Ferenczy became interested in plein air painting when he was studying in Munich.  One of is most famous works at that time was entitled Birdsong which he completed in 1893.   Unlike other realist depiction Ferenczy’s depiction is free from details. The random appearance of impressionism in details of nature and capturing atmospheres, lights and colours hastily painted could not be more unusual for him.   He spent much time working out the composition of the work and the solitary figure in the depiction is a woman, dressed in red, embracing the trunk of the tree, gazing upwards as she listens to the melodic tones of a bird in full song.  The forest is symbolized by white trunks of birch-trees and the green of the leaves.

On the Hill Top by Károly Ferenczy (1901)

In 1889, at the age of twenty-seven, Ferenczy travelled to Munich, where he first came aware of western European artistic styles such as Impressionism and the plein air works of the Barbizon School artists.  It was the works of this latter group which led Ferencszy to explore plein air painting and the effects of light on the landscape. His greatest influences were that of the French painters, particularly Édouard Manet and Camille Pissarro, and they stimulated his change of artistic direction towards a more liberated and expressive style.

Gardeners by Károly Ferenczy (1891)

Ferenczy completed Gardeners whilst living at Szentendre. The way he puts the painting together with the use of lighting, colours and details follow the ethos of Naturalism. It is typical of him to see that the space is limited. There are two figures, one of the old gardener and the other the young boy who is standing next to him in front of a light background. How Ferenczy managed the arrangement of his two figures and the balance between light and dark colours demonstrate his appreciation of decoration which were a constant throughout his career as a painter.  Gardeners is considered to be a major picture of Ferenczy’s early period and highlights his skills as an artist at the beginning of his career.

Simon Hollósy. Self-portrait, 1916

Between 1893 and 1896 he lived in Munich with his family. There he joined the circle of Simon Hollósy, a Hungarian painter who, as a young man, had moved to the German city because there was no academy of fine arts in Hungary at that time.  However, he was critical of the way art was taught at the German Academy which was strongly based on copying classical models. He left the Munich Academy and set up his own private school where he gave free classes.  His way of teaching art appealed to many young talents who were interested in realistic portrayal of their subjects.  Simon Hollósy was persuaded by some of his friends and pupils to re-locate his class in the summer of 1896 to Nagybánya, which is now Baia Mare, Romania.  He agreed and it was that new location that led to the founding of the Nagybánya artists’ colony, of which, Károly Ferenczy was one of the founding members. Nagybánya was an idyllic rural location and was the perfect place for plein air painting. It was the artists at this colony who played an important role in introducing Impressionism and Post-impressionism.

Sermon on the Mount by Károly Ferenczy (1896)

In his later years, Ferenczy painted subjects ranging from portraits, to nudes, and Biblical scenes.  Ferenczy was highly productive, and he worked in a variety of materials and genres. In November 2011, a major retrospective exhibition opened for six months at the Hungarian National Gallery, featuring nearly 150 paintings and 80 prints and drawings, together with about 50 documents (photographs, letters, catalogues and books) related to his art and life. Sadly, Károly Ferenczy’s life and prolific career were cut short by illness. He succumbed to pneumonia on March 18th, 1917, at the age of 55.

Béni Ferenczy  by his mother, Olga Fialka (1892)

Károly Ferenczy was just one part of a talented artistic family.  In 1885 he married Olga Fialka, who on her mother’s side was a relative of his, whom he met for the second time in 1884.  Olga had developed a love of art as a teenager and had family support for her desire to become a professional artist.  She studied art in Krakow under Jan Matejko, a Polish painter, and leading 19th-century exponent of history painting, known for his depictions of events from Polish history.  She then went to Vienna and attended the Academy of Fine Arts under the tutelage of August Eisenmenger, a portrait and historical painter. 

The Fialka Family by Olga Fialka (1874)

In the painting entitled The Fialka Family, Olga depicts her family taking coffee in a simple, bourgeois interior. At the head of the table is her mother, Karoline, and beside her stands her younger sister, Milada von Fialka. One of the two male family members is perhaps Károly Fialka.  If you look carefully at the right background, you can just make out a woman painting and this is thought to be Olga herself. The picture is a combination of the common interior genre and the group portrait. What differentiates this work from other contemporary genre painting of the time is that the interrelationship of the four figures comes not from a purported story line, but from a simple everyday conversation between family members and does not have the sense of a rigid group portrait. One can believe that Olga has simply conjured up a snapshot of an everyday scene.

Self Portrait by Valér Ferenczy

Valér Ferenczy was born on November 22nd 1885 in Kremnica, Slovakia.  He was the eldest son of Károly Ferenczy and Olga Fialka Ferenczy.  The family moved to Baia Mare in 1898, where Valér began his artistic tuition given to him by his parents in his father’s studio.  Between 1896 and 1901 he was enrolled at the Hollósy School in Baia Mare.  Between 1902 and 1906 he attended the drawing and painting courses held in the Free School of Painting and at the same time he also travelled abroad and attended various European academies of art.  In 1903 he studied at the Munich Academy before going on to the private school of the German secessionist painter, Lovis Corinth, in Berlin through 1904 and 1905.  From Munich he travelled to Paris where he attended the Colarossi School and later the Julian Academy in 1906.Between 1911 and 1912 he returned home and studied at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts.

Nude by Valér Ferenczy

In 1914 Valér returned to the French capital to study the technique of engraving with Orville Houghton Peets, the American painter and printmaker.

The Artist’s Mother by Valér Ferenczy

Valér applied for and was granted Romanian citizenship in 1919 and two years later married painter Eta Sárossy in 1921.

Valér Ferenczy died in Budapest on December 23rd 1954, aged 69.

Eta Sárossy in her studio (1923)

Her father was Barnabás Sárosi, who was a sergeant in the Imperial and Royal 15th Hussar Regiment, and her mother Maria (Irma) was from Moldova. She grew up in Szilágysomlyó and graduated from high school there. From 1920 she studied painting at the free school in Baia Mare, for three years. 

Fire Flowers by Eta Sárossy

Young Man with a Tennis Racket by Eta Sárossy (1933)

Eta’s marriage to Valér ended in 1929 and she remarried the following year.  She regularly exhibited her work and was a founding member of the National Salon. Initially she painted landscapes, then studied portrait painting with the Hungarian painter, Oszkar Glatz, at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts.

Béni Ferenczy by Kaoly Ferenczy (1912)

On June 18th 1890 Karoly Ferenczy’s wife Olga gave birth to twins, Béni and Noémi. Béni was the second son of Karoly and Olga Ferenczy. As a young man, Béni followed in the footsteps of his elder brother Valér and father Karoly and went to study art in both Munich and Paris.  During his stay in the French capital, he studied under both the French sculptor, Antoine Bourdelle at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière, and the Ukranian sculptor Alexander Archipenko, a resident in La Ruche, an artist’s residence in the Montparnasse district of Paris.

ni Ferenczy carving his statue Hercules. (Nagybánya, 1916)

Once he had completed his studies abroad, he returned to Hungary and lived in Budapest.  Béni was swept up by the short-lived (March to August 1919) Hungarian Commune described as a “genuine, grandiose, albeit unfinished revolution”.  He played his part in it by becoming one of the leading artists to instigate a reform of the national art scene and the setting up of a new art programme for the Hungarian nation.  After the fall of the Hungarian Commune in 1919 which only lasted 133 days, Béni exiled himself to Nagybánya in annexed Transylvania, and from there, in 1921, travelled via Czechoslovakia to Vienna and that summer he settled down in the Austrian capital.

Danae by Béni Ferenczy (1934)

The Pair by Béni Ferenczy

Béni arrived in Vienna in 1921 and married an Austrian lady and the couple had a son and daughter. He and his wife went to live in Berlin and Potsdam but found the cost of living too high and so returned to Vienna. His marriage ended in divorce and in 1932, he moved to Moscow, where he married a second time.  His bride was Erzsi (Elizabeth), a Hungarian, who had also spent her childhood in Nagybánya. From Moscow they moved to Vienna in 1936 and on to Budapest in 1938. Erzsi, beautiful, strong, full-bodied, and full of life, became the model for many of his sculptures, drawings and watercolours. Erzsi became his close companion, an inspiration for his work.  After her husband’s death in 1967, Erzsi Ferenczy worked to preserve his work and memory.  

The Ferenczy Museum in Szentendre

In 1972, Erzsi Ferenczy founded the Ferenczy Museum in Szentendre, with a large art collection that included works by each member of the family. In 1993, Erzsi established the Ferenczy Family Foundation. She died in 2000 at the age of 96.

Béni and Noémi Ferenczy

Noémi and her twin brother Béni were born to Karoly and Olga Ferenczy on June 18th 1890. Noémi, like her twin brother, first began to practice art in her father’s studio and often visited the artists’ colony in Baia Mare.  In 1911 she went to Paris and learned tapestry weaving at the Manufacture des Gobelins but was largely self-taught. Contrary to common practice, she not only designed her creations, but also made them herself. She wove her paintings on cardboard using woollen yarns that she had dyed with plant paint. Her first works were designed and woven in Baia Mare, where she exhibited for the first time in 1916 at the Ernst Museum in a joint exhibition with her father Károly and her brother Béni.  The title of the exhibition was Károly Ferenczy and his children.

State of Innocence by Noémi Ferenczy

At the age of 23, however, she started working on an early masterpiece entitled Teremtés (Creation). She chose to remain responsible for the creative process from the beginning to the end, from the numerous pencil drawings, colour sketches and cartoons, to the weaving itself.

She recalled the inspiration for this tapestry:

“… My mother and I travelled a great deal and once we went to Chartres, the cathedral of those famous 13th century glass paintings.  Brilliant in the shafts of light, the beautiful, artistic glass paintings were spellbinding.  This was where I first felt the uncontrollably inspiring force of the desire to create, which has not abandoned me throughout my career.  Creation is my first truly large-scale work.  But even that stemmed from the magic of Chartres…”

In 1920, Following the collapse of the Hungarian Commune the year before, Noémi Ferenczy moved back to Nagybánya/Baia Mare, which had become part of Romania. There she helped organise a general workers’ strike, for which she was arrested and spent a few weeks in prison. She remained active in the Communist movement, taking part at the Fifth Congress of the Communist International in Moscow in 1924.

Her works were regularly displayed in Hungary, as well as in Romania and abroad. In 1932 she moved to Budapest. By this time, her style had changed: her compositions became more monumental, with fewer, but larger figures.  From 1945 she taught at the Hungarian Academy of Applied Arts. She received the Kossuth Prize in 1948 and the title of Meritorious Artist in 1952. She died on December 20th 1957, aged 67, in Budapest, and is buried in Kerepesi Cemetery.

The Hungarian Artists. Part 1.

Museum Of Fine Arts Budapest

Buda Castle

I visited the Hungarian city of Budapest the other week and decided to visit some of its art museums.  The two main establishments are the Szépművészeti Múzeum, the Museum of Fine Arts on the Pest side of the city and the Hungarian National Gallery on the Buda side of the city which is located inside the royal palace of Buda Castle, and the vast collection there traces the country’s creative history from medieval triptychs through to post-1945 art and sculpture.  In the following blogs I want to look at the works of art of the Hungarian painters which feature predominantly in these collections.

Self portrait by Viktor Madarász

Viktor Madarász was born on December 4th 1830 in the small village of Csetnek, (today: Štítnik, Slovakia) in what is now middle-eastern Slovakia.  He came from a once noble family.  His father, András was an iron manufacturer and craftsman. Originally, his parents wanted Viktor to have a career in law and so he went to study in Bratislava.  The majority of Hungary had been under Ottoman rule from 1541 and 1699 at which time the Habsburg monarchy defeated the Ottoman forces and took control over Hungary. 

In 1848, when the Hungarian Revolution began, Madarász left college to join the struggle for independence. Despite being only seventeen, which was too young to join the army, he was accepted and participated in numerous battles and became a Second Lieutenant.  The revolution failed and for Madarász the experience was traumatic and one which he never forgot. He dedicated his art to the idea of Hungarian independence from Habsburg rule for the Hungarian people and recalled pictorially the heroic and tragic memories of this time in the history of Hungary.

Kuruck and Labanc by Viktor Madarász

One of his early historical paintings was entitled Kuruc and Labanc which depicted two brothers fighting on opposite sides of the Hungarian Revolution. The Kuruck was a group of armed anti-Habsburg grouping that wanted to rid Hungary of the Habsburg rule and the word “kuruck” is used in both a positive sense to mean “patriotic” and in a negative sense to mean “chauvinistic.” The term Labanc was designated to those Hungarians who advocated cooperating with the outside powers, the Habsburgs, and is almost always used in a negative sense to mean “disloyal” or “traitorous”. The painting was well received by the critics.

Thököly’s Dream (The Dream of an Exile) by Viktor Madarász (1856)

Dózsa’s People by Viktor Madarász

After the war of independence, the uprising had been defeated, and Madarász lived in exile and after hiding out briefly, returned on foot to his family’s home in Pécs.  Once back home he continued with his legal studies but also enrolled in art lessons from a local artist. In 1853, he enrolled for preparatory work at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna but was disheartened with the old-conservative atmosphere there, and he went to the private school of Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, who was looked upon as a bold innovator at the time. In 1856, Viktor Madarász moved to Paris where he studied in the studios of Léon Cogniet and at the École des Beaux Arts.

The Mourning of László Hunyadi by Viktor Madarász (1859)

One of Madarász most popular works and considered the main work of his life, is part of the Hungarian National Gallery collection. It is entitled The Mourning of László Hunyadi and was completed by Madardsz in 1859 whilst he was living in Paris. It is a major work of romanticism. The painting depicts the altar of the Church of Mary Magdalene in Buda, before which is the body of László Hunyadi. László Hunyadi, the son of János Hunyadi, who had defeated the Ottomans and became a national hero, was ordered to be killed by Vladislav V. Young Hunyadi enjoyed widespread popularity among the Hungarians, so he was seen as a threat to the seventeen-year-old, inexperienced King Vladislav V, the only son of the Habsburg German King Albert II.   The king, fearing the popularity of Hunyadi, ordered his execution and he was beheaded on March 16th 1457.  In this depiction we see two women kneeling at the feet of Hunyadi.  One was his mother, Erzébet Szilágyi, the other was his bride, Maria Gara.  This painting by Madarasz was believed to be an anti-Habsburg political statement during a time of the Habsburg oppression of the Hungarian people.  The work of art became a symbol of the failed Hungarian Revolution and National self-sacrifice.  The painting was thought of as the Hungarian Pieta following the iconography of the Lamentation of Christ, in which Christ’s torso was removed from the cross and his friends mourned over his body and so in a way Madarasz’s painting offered a promise that like Christ, the Hungarian nation would rise again. 

Zrínyi and Frangepán in Bécsújhely Prison by Viktor Madarász (1864)

Another painting in the Hungarian National Gallery by Madarász was his 1864 historical work entitled Zrínyi and Frangepán in Bécsújhely Prison. When the painting was first exhibited in 1866 people flocked to see it.  The painting depicts two men, Péter Zrínyi, the Ban (local ruler) of Croatia, and the Hungarian Count Ferenc Frangepán, sitting facing each other across a table in the Bécsújhely prison.  Guards and imperial officials can be seen in the background.  Both had been implicated in the Wesselényi Conspiracy, a plot among Croatian and Hungarian nobles to oust the Habsburg Monarchy from Croatia and Hungary.  The two men are saying their last farewells to each other before they were both executed.

Self portrait by Pal Szinyei Merse (1897)

The second artist I am showcasing is Pál Szinyei Merse. Pál Szinyei Merse was an outstanding master of nineteenth-century Hungarian painting and one of the most influential figures in Hungarian art. He was born on July 4th 1845 in Szinyeújfalu, a village and municipality in the Prešov District of eastern Slovakia..  He was the third of eight children of Félix Szinyei Merse and Valéria Jekelfalussy and came from a noble family which had 700 years of history, but by the 19th century the family wealth had dwindled, and yet, Pál, because of his art, never ever had problems making ends meet. 

Winter by Pal Szinyei Merse (c.1905)

After the death of his grandfather in 1850, the family moved to the mansion in the east Slovakian town of Jernye (now Jarovnice). His father graduated in law from Košice and became ambassador to the town of Sibiu during the 1839/40 Parliament, and was appointed Alispan, an office held by the most prestigious and generally wealthiest of the commoners and in 1871 became the High Sheriff.  His father was a great supporter of his son and his artistic ambitions, and his mother was a lover of literature and music, who brought considerable wealth into their marriage.

Skylark by Pál Szinyei Merse.(1882)

From 1856 Pál studied at the Catholic high school in Prešov and remained there until he reached the sixth grade. He remained a private student until 1859, and, in the autumn of 1861, he studied in Oradea, where he graduated in the summer of 1863. Pál Szinyei started to become interested in painting and took it more seriously during his high school years and received tuition from Lajos Mezey a local artist from Oradea.

The Field by Pál Szinyei Merse (1909)

In 1864, thanks to the support of his parents, he enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich, where he studied under the Hungarian artist, Alexander von Wagner, and later, from 1867 to 1869, his tutor was Karl von Piloty, the German historical painter.  Another famous artist he met whilst attending the Academy was Wilhelm Leibl, who introduced Pál to plein-air painting. After seeing a major art exhibition in 1869, Pál was anxious to get to work on his own and decided to leave the Academy. Pál Szinyei Merse was a ground-breaking pioneer and the first true colourist in the history of Hungarian painting. 

On October 15, 1873, Pál Szinyei Merse married the love of his life, Zsófia Probstner, the twenty-year-old daughter of the owner of the Lublo bath. They went on to have six children, a son, Laszlo Paul Felix and five daughters, Sophie, Mary, Valeria, Elisabeth and Adrienne.

Picnic in May by Pál Szinyei Merse (1873)

In 1873 Pál Szinyei Merse completed the painting entitled Picnic in May and although it was ridiculed by his contemporaries it is now looked upon as one of the finest Hungarian paintings.

In his autobiography Pál wrote about the painting, saying :

“…I painted myself into the picture prone, minching away, with my back to the spectator. I must admit I was thinking of the critics who would dislike my picture…”

Lady in Violet by Pál Szinyei Merse (1874)

Probably one of his most famous works was painted a year later, 1874, and is entitle Lady in Violet. It is seen on many posters around Budapest advertising the Hungarian National Gallery. It has become the Hungarian Mona Lisa and is one of the most well-known painting to this day.The painting depicts the artist’s wife, Zsófia, who was pregnant at the time, resting in the garden of their manor house in Jernye. She is wearing a taffeta bustle dress which was very popular in those days. The artist started the painting using complementary colours and then created a new colour harmony by juxtaposing yellow, violet and green. While he was in Munich he had bought the high-quality violet paint from Richard Wurm, a paint merchant and a mutual friend of both Pál Szinyei Merse and the Swiss Symbolist painter, Arnold Böcklin. It was Böcklin who encouraged Pál to use colour vigorously.

The Artist’s Wife Dressed in Yellow by Pál Szinyei Merse (1875)

The painting of his wife, which was never finished, was painted a year after his painting, Lady in Violet.

Portrait of Zsigmond Szinyei Merse by Pál Szinyei Merse (1866)

His family featured in many of his painting, such as his 1866 painting, Portrait of Zsigmond Szinyei Merse which he completed while spending his summer in Jernye. It is a depiction of his younger brother Zsigmond with a red cap, lost in thought as he plays a chibouk.

Portrait of Ninon Szinyei Merse by Pál Szinyei Merse (1870)

Pál Szinyei was working in Hungary during the French-Prussian war and painted several pictures of members of his family in a naturalist style. This portrait of his elder sister is one of them.

Portrait of Artist’s wife by Pál Szinyei Merse (1880)

Lovers by Pál Szinyei Merse (1869)

One of Szinvei’s favourite themes was outdoors parties and the enjoyment of periods of relaxation.  His 1869 painting entitled Lovers depicts two people relaxing in a rural setting, on a hillside during the early summer.  The artist has used pale colours which he has used harmoniously and this muted colouration evokes a lyrical aspect to the scene.  It is a scene of great intimacy as we see the couple lock eyes whilst their fingers tenderly intertwine and set in an almost dream-like countryside background.

…….to be continued