Franz Storno the Elder
Franz Storno the Elder (Hungarian name: Idősebb Ferenc Storno; * February 20, 1821 in Eisenstadt ; † January 29, 1907 in Ödenburg ) was an Austro-Hungarian painter , architect , restorer and art collector , father of Ferenc Storno the Younger ( 1851 - 1938 ), painter and art collector, and Kálmán cancellation ( 1858 - 1934 ), architect and restorer, founder of the cancellation collection in Sopron .
Life
The Storno family comes from the canton of Ticino in Switzerland , but lived with a short break in Landshut in Bavaria . Franz Storno was born in Eisenstadt, grew up in Landshut and - like his father - learned the trade of chimney sweep at the local trade school .
From a young age he drew excellently. He acquired his knowledge of architecture and painting - in preparation for studying in Munich - an autodidact . But because of the death of his father, he was unable to begin studying. The family became impoverished, so that he had to earn his living as a traveling chimney sweep.
In 1845 he wanted to travel to Pressburg . Since a woman was pointing him in the wrong direction on the way, he accidentally arrived in Sopron. Here he immediately found a job as a chimney sweep and after the death of his employer founded a subsistence business with his widow .
He soon found important sponsors who recognized and valued his talent. They introduced him to a number of Viennese artists; the most important of them was the painter Friedrich von Amerling . In the 1850s he worked for months in Vienna, where he measured and drew monuments and designed objects, including for Archduke Leopold of Austria . He became one of the most important illustrators of the trade art paper of the Lower Austrian Trade Association . As a colleague of Leopold Ernst , he was involved in the neo-Gothic reconstruction of Grafenegg Palace and as a draftsman in the stylish restoration of St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna.
The Vienna-based Central Commission for the Research and Conservation of Architectural Monuments , which was founded in 1850 to research and preserve medieval monuments, elected him in 1857 as an external correspondent. From 1863, with the support of Flóris Rómer, he was commissioned by the Archaeological Committee of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences to measure and document the medieval monuments and murals of historical Hungary. His first trip was to Vas and Zala , where he made copies of murals in Velemér, Tótlak and Martyáncz (from 1887: Mártonhely), among others . Later he also traveled to Croatia , Transylvania and Bihor at the request of the committee .
In the 1860s he was engaged in the research and restoration of Hungarian monuments. He became known as a restorer and fresco painter, especially in the highlands , in Transylvania and in the Murinsel region . The medieval works of art (mostly wall paintings) have been heavily revised and restored in a historicizing style. Typical examples of this are the footprints of St. Jacob's Church in Leutschau and the tympanum painting of the Romanesque south gate of the Martinsberg Archabbey .
He worked with his sons since the 1870s. They had learned the chimney sweep profession according to family tradition, but then studied at foreign art academies.
Important works (selection)
- 1859–1866: Restoration of the St. Michael Church in Ödenburg.
- 1868: crypt of the Martinsberg Archabbey. Restoration of the
- 1870–1875: Restoration of the monastery church of the Martinsberg Archabbey.
- 1876: Zápolya chapel in the Cathedral of St. Martin in Spiš Chapter . Restoration of the
- 1878–1880: The ceiling of the dining room of the Bishop's Palace in Oradea and the frescoes of the dome of the nave of the chapel of the palace and the shrine .
- 1881: Alcsút Castle in Bicske County . Decoration of the chapel of
- 1884: Kremnitz . Restoration of the castle church in
Honors
- In 1876 he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Order of Franz Joseph for the reconstruction of the church paintings in Hungary and for the restoration of the frescoes in the Dreikönigskapelle in Tulln on the Danube and the medieval wall paintings in the St. Jakobs Church in Leutschau .
- A year later he received the Knight's Cross of the papal New Year's Eve .
literature
- Enikő Buzási : Storno, Ferenc d. Ä. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 13, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 2007–2010, ISBN 978-3-7001-6963-5 , p. 330 f. (Direct links on p. 330 , p. 331 ).
Web links
- The artist and art collector Franz Storno the Elder , accessed on September 8, 2019.
- Atlas Burgenland: Franz Storno the Elder , accessed on September 8, 2019.
- Sopron: The Storno-Haus , accessed on September 8, 2019.
- Cancellation House , accessed on September 8, 2019.
- Exhibition "Storno fecit" , accessed on September 8, 2019.
References and footnotes
- ↑ The cancellation collection of the Sopron Museum , accessed on September 1, 2019.
- ↑ Magical Hungary: Velemér , accessed on September 2, 2019.
- ↑ Roman Catholic Bishop's Palace , accessed on September 4, 2019.
- ^ Karner and Dreikönigskapelle in Tulln an der Donau , accessed on September 3, 2019.
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Storno, Franz the Elder |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Cancellation, Franz |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austro-Hungarian painter, architect, restorer and art collector |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 20, 1821 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Eisenstadt |
DATE OF DEATH | January 29, 1907 |
Place of death | Sopron |