Július Jakoby Explained

Július Jakoby
Birth Name:Gyula Jakoby
Birth Date:1903 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Kassa, Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary
Death Place:Košice, Czechoslovakia
Field:Painting
Training:Hungarian University of Fine Arts
Movement:Symbolism
Works:
  • Woman Act (1932)
  • By the river (around 1950)
  • Architect's portrait (around 1962)

Július Jakoby (born as Gyula Jakoby, Košice, Kingdom of Hungary, 28 March 1903 – Košice, Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, 15 April 1985) was a Slovak painter of Hungarian[1] ancestry. Jakoby was a prominent figure of Slovakia's modernist art.[2]

His image is that of a loner, living on the fringe of society, struggling for survival at the start of his career. His work is deeply tied to the small town atmosphere of Košice and its people, whose macrocosm can be seen in most of his works. In formal terms his work reflects secessionist expressionism and symbolism of Konštantín Kövári-Kačmárik and the Hungarian symbolism of Károly Férenczy and József Rippl-Rónai.[3]

The works of Július Jakoby are exhibited in Slovak national gallery, National Gallery in Prague and Hungarian National Gallery and in many Slovak art museums and private collections. The biggest collection of his work is held in East Slovak Gallery in Košice.

His achievements are commemorated by a statue in the centre of his hometown of Košice, where he spent most of his life.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: A (cseh)szlovákiai magyarok lexikona 1918-tól (Cyclopaedia of Hungarians of Czechoslovakia from 1918) . Forum Institute (Databank of Hungarians in Slovakia) . 8 November 2012 . dead . https://archive.today/20130418231104/http://www.foruminst.sk/hu/9/xml/0/a_csehszlovakiai_magyarok_lexikona/1/87/jakoby_gyula/skat-lex_szem . 18 April 2013 .
  2. Jakoby Gyula. Kortárs Magyar Művészeti Lexikon (Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Arts), 2. kötet. Főszerk. Fitz Péter, Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 2000., 201–203.
  3. Book: 1. vyd. Slovenská národná galéria. 978-80-8085-601-4. 111 Diel Zo Zbierok. Bratislava. 2008.
  4. Web site: Július Jakoby profile . www.eantik.sk . 23 August 2022 . sk.