Dezső Czigány Explained

Dezső Czigány
Birth Date:1 June 1883
Birth Place:Budapest
Death Date:31 December 1937
Death Place:Budapest

Dezső Czigány (1 June 1883 – 31 December 1937) was a Hungarian painter who was born and died in Budapest. He was one of The Eight (1909–1918), who first exhibited under that name in Budapest in 1911 and were influential in introducing cubism, fauvism and expressionism into Hungarian art.

Many of them had studied in Munich and, even more importantly, Paris, from which they brought back leading techniques and artistic movements. They were part of the radical intellectual culture in Budapest in the early 20th century, associated with such poets as Endre Ady and composers as Béla Bartók. In 1937, Czigány killed his family and committed suicide in what was considered a psychotic breakdown.[1]

Early life and education

Dezső Czigány was born to a Jewish-Hungarian family in Budapest in 1883.[2] As a young man, he went to Munich to study art, and also to Paris. In 1901 and 1903, he studied at the Nagybánya artists' colony in Hungary, at what is now Baia Mare, Romania.

Career

Czigány was interested in exploring more contemporary movements in art and became one of The Eight in Budapest. Their first exhibit, called New Pictures, was in 1909, and in 1911, they opened another called The Eight. Other members included Károly Kernstok, Béla Czóbel, Róbert Berény, Ödön Márffy, Dezső Orbán, Lajos Tihanyi and Bertalan Pór. The sculptors Márk Vedres and Vilmos Fémes Beck were also associated with them.[3]

While they had just three exhibits as a group, the painters were influential as part of the radical intellectual life in the city, and participated in related events in literature and music; they were important through 1918.[4] Among the writers and composers involved with The Eight was Endre Ady, and Czigány was one of at least four men who painted a portrait of this pivotal figure and friend in the early 20th century. The composer Béla Bartók was also associated with these artists.

By 1914, Czigány was one of four of the group accepted for an exhibit at the Vienna Künstlerhaus, together with Márffy, Orbán, and Kernstok. The works of Berény and Tihanyi, who had embraced expressionism, were rejected as too radical.[5]

He painted many still lifes in numerous variations.[6] They are considered to show his quality of restraint and withdrawal, as the scholar Irén Kisdéginé Kirimi describes them as "lacking any lyrical quality."[7]

Unlike several members of the group who left in 1919 after the fall of the Hungarian Democratic Republic, Czigány stayed in Hungary for most of his career. In his later life, he also painted numerous self-portraits, always with a serious expression on his face.

Suffering from depression, in 1937 Czigány killed his family and committed suicide.[1] [8]

Shortly after the end of World War II, a solo retrospective exhibition was held in Budapest to honor Czigány's art work. The opening of the Eastern Bloc in the late twentieth century has stimulated renewed interest in these artists who introduced modernist movements. In the 21st century, there have been several exhibits about the modernists: a 2004 exhibit on the Fauvists in Hungary at the Hungarian National Gallery. The centenary of The Eight's first exhibit has prompted two group shows to explore their work in 2011 and 2012 in Hungary and Austria, respectively.

Exhibits

Legacy

See also

References

Book: Benezit Dictionary of Artists . 3/308 . 2013-01-10.

Book: Vollmer Encyclopedia . 1/506 . 2013-01-10.

Book: Art Encyclopedia . I/486 . 2013-01-10.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://arthistory.about.com/library/artists/lists/bl_suicide.htm "A List of Artists Who Committed Suicide"
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=YG7MhIpBAeMC&q=dezso+czigany Adrian M. Darmon, Autour de l'art juif: Encyclopédie des peintres, photographes et sculpteurs
  3. http://www.hung-art.hu/tours/20_c_1.html "Painting and Sculpture in the First Half of 20th Century"
  4. S. A. Mansbach: Modern Art in Eastern Europe. From the Baltic to the Balkans, ca. 1890–1939. Pratt Institute, New York. 1999.
  5. http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=11&int_new=57699#.UQww6vJoBJE "'The Eight: Hungary's Highway to Modernism' on view at Bank Austria Kunstforum"
  6. Judit Szabadi, György Darabos, The Kieselbach Collection: Hungarian Painting 1900–1945: A Selection, Tamás Kieselbach, 1996, pp. 66–70
  7. Irén Kisdéginé Kirimi, Still-lifes in the Hungarian National Gallery, Corvina Press, 1977
  8. https://books.google.com/books?id=I0-J-8QtIUwC&q=Czigany Michael Largo, Genius and Heroin: Creativity and Reckless Abandon
  9. http://epa.oszk.hu/01400/01462/00015/pdf/EPA01462_Hungarian_Studies_1994_Vol9_No1-2.pdf "Standing in the Storm: The Hungarian Avant-Garde from 1908–1930"
  10. Hungarian Fauves from Paris to Nagybánya, 1904–1914: Exhibition in the Hungarian National Gallery, 21 March – 30 July 2006, Kristina Passuth and György Szǔcs, Lóránd Bereczky, 2006
  11. The Eight: A Centenary Exhibition, Janus Pannonius Museum, Pécs, 10 December 2010 – 27 March 2011 Catalog, Pécs: JPM, 2011. p. 544.
  12. http://www.bankaustria-kunstforum.at/de/austellungen/kunstforum/166/die-acht-ungarns-highway-in-die-moderne Bécs, Kunstforum: Die Acht. Ungarns Highway in die Moderne