GO HOME
Visit European Gallery



  1
 
 
Prev Artist       Next Artist     

Simon Hollosy Corn Husking oil painting


Corn Husking
Painting ID::  2444
Simon Hollosy
Corn Husking
1855 Hungarian National Gallery

   
   
     

Simon Hollosy Hollosy oil painting


Hollosy
Painting ID::  68438
Simon Hollosy
Hollosy
Technique Oil on canvas Dimensions 87 ?? 105 cm

   
   
     

Simon Hollosy Autumn oil painting


Autumn
Painting ID::  95583
Simon Hollosy
Autumn
1899(1899) Medium oil on canvas cyf

   
   
     

Simon Hollosy Carousing in the Tavern oil painting


Carousing in the Tavern
Painting ID::  95584
Simon Hollosy
Carousing in the Tavern
1888(1888) Medium oil on canvas cyf

   
   
     

Simon Hollosy In the Tavern oil painting


In the Tavern
Painting ID::  95585
Simon Hollosy
In the Tavern
1887(1887) Medium oil on canvas cyf

   
   
     

  1
Prev Artist       Next Artist     

     Simon Hollosy
     1857-1918 Hungarian Simon Hollosy Gallery Simon Hollosy (Romanian: Simion Corbu); (2 February 1857, Maramarossziget, now Sighetu Marmatiei - 8 May 1918, Tecso, now Tiachiv) was a Hungarian painter. He was considered one of the greatest Hungarian representatives of 19th century Naturalism and Realism. Holl??sy came from an Armenian family who settled in Maramarossziget (present-day Sighetu Marmaţiei, Romania). He frequently worked abroad. He criticized training at the Academy and founded a private school in 1886 where he gathered young talents around him who were interested in realistic protrayal. He opened the way to new styles by relying on his personality and by pointing out the merits of French pictures (Courbet) exhibited in Munich. He abandoned the academic style in order to follow new trends in French painting. Encouraged by Istvan Reti and Janos Thorma, his pupils and friends, he spent the summer of 1896 in Nagyb??nya (present-day Baia Mare, Romania) with his school, which played an important role in Hungarian painting as the cradle of the Nagybanya school. He soon settled down in Nagybanya. With its style (sunny landscapes), his school determined Hungarian painting for decades. Leaving the Nagyb??nya colony in 1901, he spent the summers in Tecso with his students from 1902. During winters he was in Munich to run his school there. He was not productive as an artist: he was in search of atmospheres and his productivity was confined to teaching. His large scale plan of "Rakoczi March" with a lot of figures got as far sketches because he kept on changing his mind. The landscapes painted in Tecso include "Landscape in T??cső", "Landscape with Stacks and Sunset with Stacks", where he applied elements of plein air and impressionism. His self-portrait (1916) is one of his most harrowing pictures.

     Related Artists::.
     | Orchardson, Sir William Quiller | Poynter, Sir Edward John | William Henry Hunt,OWS |


IntoFineArt Co,.Ltd.