Hugo Hodiener

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugo Hodiener (also Hodina , born March 23, 1886 in Mährisch Trübau , Austria-Hungary , † 1945 in Klais ) was an Austrian landscape painter .

The pilgrimage from Tannhäuser

Life

Hodiener began his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and then went to Munich , where he graduated from the academy there under Ludwig von Löfftz and Martin von Feuerstein . From 1908 he went on study trips to Italy via the Oberinntal and Pitztal . During the war effort in World War I he was wounded and from June 20, 1918 he was employed as a war painter in the art group of the Austro-Hungarian war press quarter . While working on the front, he was taken prisoner by Russia , from which he returned home via Sweden and Denmark . In the state of the war press headquarters it was managed until November 5, 1918. His preference was the representation of high mountain landscapes . Immediately after the war, in 1919, he was represented with the watercolor Redeemed and the painting The Dead Comrade . He then continued to work in Vienna before he was de-registered for Munich on October 30, 1935.

Hodiener was represented with several works at the " Great German Art Exhibitions " in the House of German Art . There he put u. a. the painting "The pilgrimage from Tannhäuser", which Adolf Hitler bought for 5,500 RM . His works could also be seen in exhibitions of the Nazi cultural community , for example in the show "Der Wald" (Berlin, 1936) and in "Heroische Kunst" (Munich, 1936).

Works (selection)

literature

  • Heinrich Fuchs: The Austrian painters born in 1881-1900, Vienna 1976, Volume 1, P. K 101

Web links

Commons : Hugo Hodiener  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. The War Press Quarter - KPQ at wladimir-aichelburg.at, accessed on January 20, 2015
  2. ^ Heinrich Fuchs: The Austrian painters born in 1881-1900, Vienna 1976, Volume 1, p. K 101
  3. Hugo Hodiener. In: GDK Research. Retrieved August 13, 2019 .
  4. ^ Hugo Hodiener "The pilgrimage from Tannenhäuser". In: GDK Research. Retrieved August 13, 2019 .
  5. Rittich, Werner: Art exhibition "The Forest". For the exhibition of the Nazi cultural community in Berlin . In: Art and People . tape 4 , 7, pp. 240-243.
  6. NS-Kulturgemeinde (Ed.): Exhibition cat. Heroic art . Munich 1936.