Fritz Brandtner Explained

Fritz Brandtner
Birth Name:Friedrich Wilhelm Brandtner
Birth Date:1896 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Danzig, Prussia
Nationality:Canadian
Spouse:Mieze Preuss (m. 1929)
Training:largely self-taught and in Danzig with Franz August Pfuhie at the University of Danzig
Movement:German Expressionism, modernism
Awards:Jessie Dow Award (1946); Canada Council Visual Arts Award (1968)
Known For:painter, graphic artist, muralist; teacher at University of Danzig, 1924-1926; McGill University, Montreal; University of New Brunswick summer school
Elected:C.S.P.W.C.; C.G.P.; C.S.G.A.; F.C.A.

Friedrich Wilhelm Brandtner (28 July 1896 – 7 November 1969), known during his life as Fritz Brandtner, was a German-born Canadian artist and art instructor.[1] During his career he worked variously as painter, printmaker, graphic artist, illustrator, muralist, and set designer.[2]

Biography

Brandtner was born n Danzig and educated as a student with F. A. Pfuhle at the University of Danzig. He became his assistant,[3] then emigrated to Canada from Germany in 1928. Following a short stay in Winnipeg he settled in Montreal in 1934. He was a member of the Contemporary Arts Society in Montreal, serving as its first secretary.[4] He was also a passionate art-educator, teaching classes with Canadian painter Marian Dale Scott. Brandtner introduced notions of the German Expressionists to Canada, especially the works of Bauhaus. Later, he introduced abstraction into his practice.

In 1936, together with Norman Bethune, George Holt, Elizabeth Frost, André Charles Biéler and Hazen Sise, he founded the Children's Art Centre in Montreal. The centre offered free art classes to local children.[5] [6] [7] In 1937, Charles Goldhamer took Brandtner and painter Caven Atkins to paint in the hills north of Baie St. Paul, an early introduction for Brandtner to the north shore of the St. Lawrence. His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1948 Summer Olympics.[8]

Brandtner died in Montreal on 7 November 1969. A close friend of Brandtner, Montreal art dealer Paul Kastel, of the Kastel Gallery, was named executor of Brandtner's estate. Kastel continued to promote Brandtner's work over the following four decades. In 2011, Galerie Valentin in Montreal held a retrospective exhibition of Brandtner's works.[9]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fritz Brandtner - National Gallery of Canada | National Gallery of Canada . Gallery.ca . 2017-04-08.
  2. Book: MacDonald . Colin . A Dictionary of Canadian Artists, vol one, A to F . 1967 . Canadian Paperbacks . Ottawa . 77–80 . 2020-05-13.
  3. Helen Kemp Frye, 'Fritz Brandtner". The Canadian Forum vol. 18 (Dec. 1938), pp. 272-273.
  4. Web site: Canadian Painting in the 30s: part 7. The Eastern Group and the Contemporary Arts Society. National Gallery of Canada. 25 November 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20151025133016/http://cybermuse.gallery.ca/cybermuse/enthusiast/thirties/html_chapters/catalogue_7_en.html. 25 October 2015. dead.
  5. Web site: Fritz Brandtner.
  6. Book: Norman Bethune: The Incredible Life and Tragic Death of a Revered Canadian Doctor. 9781552778128. Hern. Frances. 22 February 2012. 52.
  7. Book: The Dignity of Every Human Being: New Brunswick Artists and Canadian Culture between the Great Depression and the Cold War. 9781442663206. Niergarth. Kirk. 26 February 2015. 64.
  8. Web site: Fritz Brandtner . Olympedia . 22 August 2020.
  9. Web site: Fritz Brandtner exposition rétrospective - Retrospective exhibition Fritz Brandtner by Numérique Archambault Nu/Ar Inc . issuu . 2011-11-24 . 2017-04-08.