Ernst Fuchs (artist)  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Revision as of 07:26, 23 August 2007
WikiSysop (Talk | contribs)

← Previous diff
Revision as of 11:17, 17 May 2008
Jahsonic (Talk | contribs)

Next diff →
Line 1: Line 1:
-{{Template}}'''Ernst Fuchs''' (born [[February 13]] [[1930]]) is an [[Austria]]n visionary [[painter]], draftsman, printmaker, [[sculptor]], [[architect]], stage designer, [[composer]], [[poet]], [[singer]] and one of the founders of the [[Vienna School of Fantastic Realism]].+{{Template}}
 +'''Ernst Fuchs''' (born [[February 13]] [[1930]]) is an [[Austria]]n visionary [[painter]], draftsman, printmaker, [[sculptor]], [[architect]], stage designer, [[composer]], [[poet]], [[singer]] and one of the founders of the [[Vienna School of Fantastic Realism]].
 +[[Image:Ernst Fuchs 2007.jpg|thumb|Ernst Fuchs]]
 +'''Ernst Fuchs''' (born [[February 13]] [[1930]]) is an [[Austria]]n visionary [[painter]], draftsman, printmaker, [[sculptor]], [[architect]], stage designer, [[composer]], [[poet]], [[singer]] and one of the founders of the [[Vienna School of Fantastic Realism]].
 + 
 +==Life and Work==
 +He studied sculpture with [[Emmy Steinbock]] (1943), attended the St. Anna Painting School where he studied under Professor [[Fröhlich]] (1944), and entered the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna (1945) where he began his studies under Professor [[Robin C. Anderson]], later moving to the class of [[Albert Paris von Gütersloh]].
 + 
 +At the Academy he met [[Arik Brauer]], [[Rudolf Hausner]], [[Wolfgang Hutter]], and [[Anton Lehmden]], together with whom he later founded what has become known as the [[Vienna School of Fantastic Realism]]. He was also a founding member of the [[Art-Club]] (1946), as well as the [[Hundsgruppe]], set up in opposition to it in 1951, together with [[Friedensreich Hundertwasser]] and [[Arnulf Rainer]].
 + 
 +His work of this period was influenced by the art of [[Gustav Klimt]] and [[Egon Schiele]] and then by [[Max Pechstein]], [[Heinrich Campendonck]], [[Edvard Munch]], [[Henry Moore]] and [[Pablo Picasso]]. During this time, seeking to achieve the vivid lighting effects achieved by such Old Masters as [[Albrecht Altdorfer]], [[Albrecht Dürer]], [[Matthias Grünewald]] and [[Martin Schongauer]], he revived and adopted the ''mischtechnik'' (mixed technique) of painting. In the ''mischtechnik'', [[egg tempera]] is used to build up volume, and is then glazed with [[oil painting|oil paints]] mixed with [[resin]], producing a jewel-like effect.
 + 
 +Between 1950 and 1961, Fuchs lived mostly in [[Paris]], and made a number of journeys to the [[United States]] and [[Israel]]. His favourite reading material at the time was the sermons of [[Meister Eckehart]]. He also studied the [[symbolism]] of the [[alchemy|alchemists]] and read Jung's ''[[Psychology of Alchemy]]''. His favourite examples at the time were the [[mannerism|mannerists]], especially [[Jacques Callot]], and he was also very much influenced by [[Jan Van Eyck]] and [[Jean Fouquet]]. In 1958 he founded the Galerie Fuchs-Fischoff in Vienna to promote and support the younger painters of the [[Fantastic realism|Fantastic Realism]] school. Together with [[Friedensreich Hundertwasser]] and [[Arnulf Rainer]], he founded the [[Pintorarium]].
 + 
 +In 1956 he converted to [[Roman Catholicism]] (his mother had had him baptized during the war in order to save him from being sent to a concentration camp). In 1957 he entered the Dormition Abbey on Mount Zion where he began work on his monumental ''Last Supper'' and devoted himself to producing small sized paintings on religious themes such as Moses and the Burning Bush, culminating in a commission to paint three altar paintings on parchment, the cycle of the ''Mysteries of the Holy Rosary'' (1958-61), for the [[Rosenkranzkirche]] in Hetzendorf, Vienna. He also deals with contemporary issues in his masterpiece of this period, ''Psalm 69'' (1949-60). (Fuchs, 1978, p. 53).
 + 
 +He returned to Vienna in 1961 and had a vision of what he called the ''verschollener Stil'' (The Hidden Prime of Styles), the theory of which he set forth in his inspired and grandiose book ''[[Architectura Caelestis: Die Bilder des verschollenen Stils]]'' (Salzburg, 1966). He also produced several important cycles of prints, such as ''[[Unicorn]]'' (1950-52), ''[[Samson]]'' (1960-64), ''Esther'' (1964-7) and ''[[Sphinx]]'' (1966-7; all illustrated in Weis). In 1972 he acquired the derelict [[Otto Wagner]] Villa in Hütteldorf, which he restored and transformed. The villa was inaugurated as the [[Ernst Fuchs Museum]] in 1988. From 1970 on, he embarked on numerous sculptural projects such as ''Queen Esther'' (h. 2.63 m, 1972), located at the entrance to the museum, and also mounted on the radiator cap of the Cadillac at the entrance to the [[Teatro Museo|Dalí Museum]] in [[Figueres]], [[Catalonia]], Spain.
 + 
 +From 1974 he became involved in designing stage sets and costumes for the operas of [[Mozart]] and [[Richard Wagner]] including ''[[Die Zauberflöte]]'', ''[[Parsifal]]'', and ''[[Lohengrin (opera)|Lohengrin]]''.
 + 
 +In 1993 Fuchs was given a retrospective exhibition at the [[Russian museum|State Russian Museum in St. Petersburg]], one of the first Western artists so honored.
 + 
 +Ernst Fuchs continues to inspire, and has many exponents and disciples including [[H.R. Giger]], [[Victor Safonkin]], [[Mati Klarwein]], [[Mark Ryden]], [[Robert Venosa]], [[De Es Schwertberger]], and his son Michael Fuchs. A new generation of students includes [[Andrew Gonzalez (artist)|Andrew Gonzalez]], [[Amanda Sage]], [[Laurence Caruana]], [[Oleg_A._Korolev]] and [[Antonio Roybal]].
 +
 +From the Foreword to the publication " Metamorphosis":
 +
 +"....Even when Fantastic art was strictly forbidden, such as during the period when Russia was ruled by Brezhnev, knowledge of this style of art continued to spread. One of my first students in 1952 in Paris was a very remarkable, talented person, a dancer, painter and tattoo fetishist, Vali Myers from Melbourne. We stayed in contact until her death in 2005. She and Mati Klarwein were my first followers in Paris, so it gives me great pleasure that another Australian admirer of my work should publish this book. Some of the names included here are very familiar to me, or have studied under my guidance and become excellent teachers themselves – artists such as Brigid Marlin and Philip Rubinov Jacobson. This book will carry a fundamental message to art lovers: Fantastic art has survived despite all official attempts to quench its spirit."
 +Ernst Fuchs 2006
 + 
 +==Publications==
 +*''Architectura caelestis: die Bilder des verschollenen Stils'' (Salzburg: Residenz, 1966/Pb ed., Dtv, 1973)
 +*''Album der Familie Fuchs'' (Salzburg: Residenz, 1973)
 +*''Im Zeichen der Sphinx: Schriften und Bilder'', ed. Walter Schurian (Munich, Dtv, 1978)
 +*''Aura: Ein Marchen der Sehnsucht'' (Munich: Dtv, 1981)
 +*''Der Prophet des Schonen: Arno Breker'' (Marco, 1982)
 +*''Von Jahwe: Gedichte'' (Munich, 1982)
 +<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:fuchs.altar.cu.360.jpg|thumb|right|250px|''The transfiguration of the resurrected'', [[egg tempera]] and [[oil painting|oil]] on wood]] -->
 + 
 +==Other publications==
 +* Friedrich Haider: ''Ernst Fuchs - Zeichnungen und Graphik aus der frühen Schaffensperiode - 1942 bis 1959.'' Wien: Löcker-Verlag, 2003. ISBN 3-85409-387-X
 +* 2005 - ''Fantastic Art'' (Taschen)(Schurian, Prof. Dr. Walter) ISBN 978-3-8228-2954-7 (English edition)
 +* 2007 - ''Metamorphosis'' (beinArt) ISBN 978-0-9803231-0-8
 + 
 +==External links==
 +* [http://www.ernstfuchs-zentrum.com/ Official site]
 +* [http://www.ernstfuchs.com Ernstfuchs.com] - Homage website dedicated to preserve Ernst Fuchs legacy.
 +* [http://www.ariadne.at/?artist_id=69&language=en example of very early etchings from Ernst Fuchs]
 +* [http://antonioroybal.com/FuchsNew.htm Homage Website] - Homage website with additional info about Fuchs.
 +* [http://visionaryrevue.com/webtext3/fuchsint1.html 2001 Interview]
 +* [http://beinart.org/artists/ernst-fuchs/?GID=646 Ernst Fuchs - Fantastic Art Collective]
 +* [http://www.labyrinthe.com/index2.php?cat=kuenstler Labyrinthe Gesellschaft für phantastische und visionäre Künste e.V.] - gallery of images by Fuchs and other artists
 + 
 +==See also==
 +* [[De Es Schwertberger]], a student of Ernst Fuchs
 +* [[Laurence Caruana]], a former assistant who now teaches Fuchs' painting technique.
 +* [[Oleg_A._Korolev]] a former assistant.
 +* [[Fantastic realism|Fantastic Realism]] School of art
 +* [[Society for the Art of Imagination]]
 +* [[Philip Rubinov Jacobson]], a student of Ernst Fuchs who currently teaches mish technique
 +*[http://www.galerie-menssen.de/01_kuenstler.php?kuenstler_id=7 Exclusiv works of Ernst Fuchs in the ''Menssen artgallery'']
 + 
 +==References==
 +*Ernst Fuchs: ''Zeichnungen und Graphiken'', (Ketterer-Kunst, 1967)
 +*H. Weis, ed.: ''Ernst Fuchs: Das graphische Werk'' (Vienna, 1967)
 +*Ernst Fuchs: ''Homage à Böcklin'', (Frankf./Main/Geneva/Vienna, 1971)
 +*''Ernst Fuchs: oeuvre gravé'' (Friburg: Musee d’art et d’histoire, 1975)
 +*''Fuchs über Ernst Fuchs: Bilder und Zeichnungen von 1945-1976'', ed. R.P. Hartmann (Paris, 1977)
 +*Ernst Fuchs: ''Arbeiten für der Hamburger Staatsoper'', (Hamburg 1977)
 +*R. P. Hartmann, ed.: Ernst Fuchs: Das graphische Werk, 1967-1980 (Munich, 1980)
 +*Ernst Fuchs: ''Bildalchemie'', (Osnabrück: Kulturgesichtliches Mus., c1981)
 +*''Gedichte von Jahwe'' (Munich: R. P. Hartmann, 1982)
 +*U. Hotzy, ''Ernst Fuchs: die Werke aus den Jahren im Ausland'' (Salzburg, Univ., Diss., 1982)
 +*''Fuchs Graphik: Sydows Katalog einer idealen Sammlung'', ed., Heinrich v. Sydow-Zirkwitz (Berlin: Studio 69, 1983)
 +*''Planeta Caelestis'' (Berlin and Munich, 1987)
 +*''Der Feuerfuchs'', ed. R.P. Hartmann (Frankf./Main: Umschau Verlag, 1988)
 +*''Ernst Fuchs und Wein'', (Landau/Pfalz: Verein Südliche Weinstarasse, 1995)
 + 
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

Revision as of 11:17, 17 May 2008

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Ernst Fuchs (born February 13 1930) is an Austrian visionary painter, draftsman, printmaker, sculptor, architect, stage designer, composer, poet, singer and one of the founders of the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism.

Ernst Fuchs (born February 13 1930) is an Austrian visionary painter, draftsman, printmaker, sculptor, architect, stage designer, composer, poet, singer and one of the founders of the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism.

Contents

Life and Work

He studied sculpture with Emmy Steinbock (1943), attended the St. Anna Painting School where he studied under Professor Fröhlich (1944), and entered the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna (1945) where he began his studies under Professor Robin C. Anderson, later moving to the class of Albert Paris von Gütersloh.

At the Academy he met Arik Brauer, Rudolf Hausner, Wolfgang Hutter, and Anton Lehmden, together with whom he later founded what has become known as the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism. He was also a founding member of the Art-Club (1946), as well as the Hundsgruppe, set up in opposition to it in 1951, together with Friedensreich Hundertwasser and Arnulf Rainer.

His work of this period was influenced by the art of Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele and then by Max Pechstein, Heinrich Campendonck, Edvard Munch, Henry Moore and Pablo Picasso. During this time, seeking to achieve the vivid lighting effects achieved by such Old Masters as Albrecht Altdorfer, Albrecht Dürer, Matthias Grünewald and Martin Schongauer, he revived and adopted the mischtechnik (mixed technique) of painting. In the mischtechnik, egg tempera is used to build up volume, and is then glazed with oil paints mixed with resin, producing a jewel-like effect.

Between 1950 and 1961, Fuchs lived mostly in Paris, and made a number of journeys to the United States and Israel. His favourite reading material at the time was the sermons of Meister Eckehart. He also studied the symbolism of the alchemists and read Jung's Psychology of Alchemy. His favourite examples at the time were the mannerists, especially Jacques Callot, and he was also very much influenced by Jan Van Eyck and Jean Fouquet. In 1958 he founded the Galerie Fuchs-Fischoff in Vienna to promote and support the younger painters of the Fantastic Realism school. Together with Friedensreich Hundertwasser and Arnulf Rainer, he founded the Pintorarium.

In 1956 he converted to Roman Catholicism (his mother had had him baptized during the war in order to save him from being sent to a concentration camp). In 1957 he entered the Dormition Abbey on Mount Zion where he began work on his monumental Last Supper and devoted himself to producing small sized paintings on religious themes such as Moses and the Burning Bush, culminating in a commission to paint three altar paintings on parchment, the cycle of the Mysteries of the Holy Rosary (1958-61), for the Rosenkranzkirche in Hetzendorf, Vienna. He also deals with contemporary issues in his masterpiece of this period, Psalm 69 (1949-60). (Fuchs, 1978, p. 53).

He returned to Vienna in 1961 and had a vision of what he called the verschollener Stil (The Hidden Prime of Styles), the theory of which he set forth in his inspired and grandiose book Architectura Caelestis: Die Bilder des verschollenen Stils (Salzburg, 1966). He also produced several important cycles of prints, such as Unicorn (1950-52), Samson (1960-64), Esther (1964-7) and Sphinx (1966-7; all illustrated in Weis). In 1972 he acquired the derelict Otto Wagner Villa in Hütteldorf, which he restored and transformed. The villa was inaugurated as the Ernst Fuchs Museum in 1988. From 1970 on, he embarked on numerous sculptural projects such as Queen Esther (h. 2.63 m, 1972), located at the entrance to the museum, and also mounted on the radiator cap of the Cadillac at the entrance to the Dalí Museum in Figueres, Catalonia, Spain.

From 1974 he became involved in designing stage sets and costumes for the operas of Mozart and Richard Wagner including Die Zauberflöte, Parsifal, and Lohengrin.

In 1993 Fuchs was given a retrospective exhibition at the State Russian Museum in St. Petersburg, one of the first Western artists so honored.

Ernst Fuchs continues to inspire, and has many exponents and disciples including H.R. Giger, Victor Safonkin, Mati Klarwein, Mark Ryden, Robert Venosa, De Es Schwertberger, and his son Michael Fuchs. A new generation of students includes Andrew Gonzalez, Amanda Sage, Laurence Caruana, Oleg_A._Korolev and Antonio Roybal.

From the Foreword to the publication " Metamorphosis":

"....Even when Fantastic art was strictly forbidden, such as during the period when Russia was ruled by Brezhnev, knowledge of this style of art continued to spread. One of my first students in 1952 in Paris was a very remarkable, talented person, a dancer, painter and tattoo fetishist, Vali Myers from Melbourne. We stayed in contact until her death in 2005. She and Mati Klarwein were my first followers in Paris, so it gives me great pleasure that another Australian admirer of my work should publish this book. Some of the names included here are very familiar to me, or have studied under my guidance and become excellent teachers themselves – artists such as Brigid Marlin and Philip Rubinov Jacobson. This book will carry a fundamental message to art lovers: Fantastic art has survived despite all official attempts to quench its spirit." Ernst Fuchs 2006

Publications

  • Architectura caelestis: die Bilder des verschollenen Stils (Salzburg: Residenz, 1966/Pb ed., Dtv, 1973)
  • Album der Familie Fuchs (Salzburg: Residenz, 1973)
  • Im Zeichen der Sphinx: Schriften und Bilder, ed. Walter Schurian (Munich, Dtv, 1978)
  • Aura: Ein Marchen der Sehnsucht (Munich: Dtv, 1981)
  • Der Prophet des Schonen: Arno Breker (Marco, 1982)
  • Von Jahwe: Gedichte (Munich, 1982)

Other publications

External links

See also

References

  • Ernst Fuchs: Zeichnungen und Graphiken, (Ketterer-Kunst, 1967)
  • H. Weis, ed.: Ernst Fuchs: Das graphische Werk (Vienna, 1967)
  • Ernst Fuchs: Homage à Böcklin, (Frankf./Main/Geneva/Vienna, 1971)
  • Ernst Fuchs: oeuvre gravé (Friburg: Musee d’art et d’histoire, 1975)
  • Fuchs über Ernst Fuchs: Bilder und Zeichnungen von 1945-1976, ed. R.P. Hartmann (Paris, 1977)
  • Ernst Fuchs: Arbeiten für der Hamburger Staatsoper, (Hamburg 1977)
  • R. P. Hartmann, ed.: Ernst Fuchs: Das graphische Werk, 1967-1980 (Munich, 1980)
  • Ernst Fuchs: Bildalchemie, (Osnabrück: Kulturgesichtliches Mus., c1981)
  • Gedichte von Jahwe (Munich: R. P. Hartmann, 1982)
  • U. Hotzy, Ernst Fuchs: die Werke aus den Jahren im Ausland (Salzburg, Univ., Diss., 1982)
  • Fuchs Graphik: Sydows Katalog einer idealen Sammlung, ed., Heinrich v. Sydow-Zirkwitz (Berlin: Studio 69, 1983)
  • Planeta Caelestis (Berlin and Munich, 1987)
  • Der Feuerfuchs, ed. R.P. Hartmann (Frankf./Main: Umschau Verlag, 1988)
  • Ernst Fuchs und Wein, (Landau/Pfalz: Verein Südliche Weinstarasse, 1995)




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Ernst Fuchs (artist)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools