Historia przyjaźni Mariana Wawrzenieckiego i Antoniego Gawińskiego
2007; The Learned Society of the John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin; Volume: 55; Issue: 04 Linguagem: Inglês
ISSN
2544-5200
Autores Tópico(s)Central European Literary Studies
ResumoThere are many friendships between artists in the history of art. As new materials appear. we may trace successive interesting relations between artists. One example was the friendship between Antoni Gawiriski and Marian Wawrzeniecki. The second artist was thirteen years older than the first one, and his influence was decisively much more important on the younger friend. They met most certainly around 1900, and their friendship survived over forty years. until the times of the Second World War and the year of Marian Wawrzeniecki's death in 1943. When Wawrzeniecki met Gawiriski he was already a well-known. though underestimated. artist. He was first of all a respected scientist and archaeologist. The artist-erudite exerted a great influence on the younger painter who sought his artistic way. They were cemented by their love to art, love to the future, the cult of Jan Matejko, and common artistic views. They both tried to find national elements in the local living colour of Slavonic past and in the unique and individual work of home artists. They criticised S. Witkiewicz and attacked his lack of respect for the historical painting of Jan Matejko and Henryk Siemiradzki. They opposed the hegemony of the Polish Society of Artists Art. They attacked in the press their dominance and took part in competitive exhibitions organised by the artists from the groups Zero or Odlam. Gawiriski was most impressed by Wawrzeniecki's illustrations, a fact that was particularly visible in Adolf Dygasinski's Gody źyciu illustrated in 1910 by he younger artist.
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