Hilde Nöbl

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Hilde Nöbl (born January 25, 1912 in Innsbruck ; † October 24, 2001 there ) was an Austrian painter .

life and work

Hilde Nöbl received her first artistic lessons from 1920 to 1930 with Max von Esterle and at the Toni Kirchmayrs painting school in Innsbruck and as a guest student in Hans Pontiller's sculpture class at the Innsbruck State Trade School . In 1944/45 and 1951/52 she studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna with Sergius Pauser , Herbert Boeckl and Albert Paris Gütersloh . In 1952 she stayed in Paris on a grant from the French Cultural Institute . She then lived as a freelance artist in Innsbruck. She won prizes in public competitions for artistic wall decorations, including in 1953 for a mosaic in the medical clinic in Innsbruck.

Hilde Nöbl developed her visual language to a reduction of form and color, which is determined by clarity and calm. Her works, which include still lifes , landscapes and portraits , are compositions of large, colored shapes bordered by black lines on the border with abstraction. The colors are limited to a few, contrasting tones. Her works are  kept in the Tyrolean State Museum , among other places .

In her youth, Hilde Nöbl was also active as a javelin thrower in the Innsbruck AC  . In 1928 she achieved a width of 39.40 m at Tivoli in Innsbruck , which would have meant a world record. Since the follow-up inspection showed that the spear was 1 cm too short, it was not recognized.

Awards

literature

  • Christoph Bertsch (Ed.): Art in Tyrol, 20th century: significantly expanded and revised inventory catalog of the collection of the Institute for Art History at the University of Innsbruck including documentation of legacies and bequests in two volumes. Innsbruck 1997. Volume 1, p. 32; Volume 2, pp. 488–492 ( urn: nbn: at: at-ubi: 2-7284 ; urn: nbn: at: at-ubi: 2-7291 )
  • Inge Praxmarer: “As if they wanted to take the glory of our superiority away from us.” Visual artists in Tyrol. In: Office of the Tyrolean Provincial Government (Ed.): Panoptica. women.culture.tyrol. Innsbruck 2013, pp. 49–50 ( online ; PDF; 16 MB)
  • Nöbl Hilde. In: Ilse Korotin (ed.): BiografıA. Lexicon of Austrian Women. Volume 2: I-O. Böhlau, Vienna / Cologne / Weimar 2016, ISBN 978-3-205-79590-2 , pp. 2393-2394 ( online ; PDF; 7.7 MB).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Acquisitions 1968. In: Publications of the Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum, Volume 49 (1969), pp. 134–135 ( online ; PDF; 4 MB)
  2. ^ Club chronicle IAC - Athletics 1919 - 1999 (PDF; 495 kB)
  3. City of Innsbruck: Prize of the state capital Innsbruck for artistic creation (PDF; 197 kB)
  4. City of Innsbruck: Decoration of Honor for Art and Culture (PDF; 306 kB)