Fryderyk Pautsch

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Fryderyk Pautsch , also Friedrich Pautsch (born September 22, 1877 in Delatyn ( Galicia ), † July 1, 1950 in Krakow ) was an Austro-Polish painter of the Young Poland style .

Life

He began his studies in 1898 at the Law Faculty of the University of Lviv and continued his studies from 1899 at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow. From 1900 to 1906 he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow with Leon Wyczółkowski and Józef Unierzyski . Thanks to a scholarship, he studied further 1905-1906 in Paris at the Académie Julian . After that he settled in Lviv , often visiting Pokutien in the south-eastern corner of Galicia. In 1908 he became a member of the Polish artists' association "Sztuka" (art) , and in 1912 of the Vienna Hagenbund . In the same year he was appointed professor of decorative painting at the State Academy of Arts and Crafts in Wroclaw . He also exhibited under the name of Friedrich Pautsch , for example at the Great Berlin Art Exhibition in 1914, where he exhibited 17 works.

During the First World War he served in the Polish Legion , an independent formation of the Austro-Hungarian Army . In addition, from April 19, 1915, he worked as a war painter in the art group of the Austro-Hungarian War Press Quarter , on whose professional lists he was listed until December 1918.

In 1919 he was appointed director of the School of Crafts in Poznan.

He was a co-founder and first chairman of the Poznan artist group “Świt” ( Dawn ).

In 1925 he moved to Cracow , where he was appointed professor at the Academy of Fine Arts Cracow . In 1931 and 1936 he was elected rector of the academy.

During the Second World War he was a lecturer at the Cracow State School of Applied Arts . In 1945 he was again a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow.

Works (excerpt)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Catalog , p. 165
  2. Catalog , p. 81
  3. Walter Reichel: "Press work is propaganda work" - Media Administration 1914-1918: The War Press Quarter (KPQ) . Communications from the Austrian State Archives (MÖStA), special volume 13, Studienverlag, Vienna 2016, ISBN 978-3-7065-5582-1 , p. 183.
  4. The War Press Quarter - KPQ at wladimir-aichelburg.at, accessed on September 23, 2014