Fritz Aigner

Fritz Aigner (July 13, 1930 – January 9, 2005) was an Austrian graphic artist and painter.

Biography

Aigner studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna from 1947 to 1952. In 1952 he won an Austrian state fine arts prize for his artwork Die Klage des verlorgenen Sohnes. He worked later as an artist in Spain, Ireland, London and his hometown, Linz.

Aigner's work was overtly influenced by that of Rembrandt, notably in his oil painting Rembrandts Trick mit dem Licht. He was nicknamed "the Rembrandt of Linz". His artwork often featured dark, acherontic and apocalyptic scenes with allusions to society and well-known society figures.

After his death an Austrian journalist described Aigner as "an artist who dealt with the conflict areas eros and religion and between surrealism, realism and fantastic realism. Even allusions to the border of caricature can be found in his work."

Selected works

  • Amerikaner
  • Sauregurkenzeit
  • Kannibalismus an einem Dichter
  • Selbstporträt mit doppelten Augen
  • Zachers Requiem für Oskar Schimonek

Exhibitions

The Nordico Museum in Linz, Aigner's hometown, scheduled an exhibition of his work for the period September 29 2008 to January 11 2009.[1]

Sources

gollark: Yes, just take it on a laptop or something.
gollark: The entire content of reddit?
gollark: Randomized controlled trials?
gollark: I didn't, no.
gollark: It wasn't that. It was some weird historical factors, and it being easy to write compilers for, and being tied to Unix.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.