Anton Nowak

Anton Nowak (10 May 1865 – 28 May 1932) was an Austrian artist and graphic designer.

Life

Nowak was born in Marburg an der Drau and studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna under Christian Griepenkerl and Leopold Karl Müller.[1][2] In 1894, he joined the Vienna Künstlerhaus.[3]

He was a founding member of the Vienna Secession,[4] and had a work shown at the group's first exhibition.[5] Nowak contributed woodcuts to the group's magazine Ver Sacrum, taking inspiration from the northern Adriatic region.[1] He was on the group's working committee in 1898,[6] 1902,[7] and served as the group's president in 1908-09.[3]

He also painted watercolours of Austrian countryside and the city of Brno, where he ran a painting school. He may have died in the city, but this is not certain.[1][3]

Style

Nowak's paintings were brightly coloured and naturalistic; under the Secession's influence, he experimented with pointillism in the style of Théo van Rysselberghe. His work as a designer was firmly within the Secession's tradition.[1] He was influenced by Theodor von Hörmann.[3]

gollark: I prefer ominous computer-controlled cubes™ which generate arbitrary electromagnetic radiation™.
gollark: I was referring to C++.
gollark: They *do* have better spectra, generally.
gollark: I wanted to port my bad synthesizer program to a faster language.
gollark: Well, it doesn't have `unsafe` in it, but it's also 50 lines.

References

  1. O Matulla (1976). "Anton Nowak". Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon 1815–1950. 7. p. 160.
  2. Friedrich von Boetticher, ed. (1898). "Nowak, Anton". Malerwerke des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. 2.1. p. 166. OL 5200838W.
  3. "Painting "Großer Pyhrgas" by Anton Nowak, Austria, around 1900". Auctionata. Archived from the original on 2014-11-26. Retrieved 2014-10-26.
  4. "Ordentliche Mitglieder" [Ordinary Members]. Ver Sacrum. 1: 28. 1898.
  5. "Verzeichnis: der auf der 1. Ausstellung der Vereinigung Bildender Künstler Österreichs angekauften Kunstwerke". Ver Sacrum (8): 37. August 1898.
  6. "Mittheilungen der Vereinigung Bildender Künstler". Ver Sacrum (5): 30. May 1899.
  7. "Mitteilungen". Ver Sacrum (14): 218. 1902.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.