Victor Tolgesy | |
Birth Date: | 22 August 1928 |
Birth Place: | Miskolc, Hungary |
Death Place: | Ottawa, Ontario |
Nationality: | Hungarian-Canadian |
Known For: | sculptor |
Victor Tolgesy (22 August 1928 - 6 January 1980)[1] was a Hungarian-born Canadian sculptor. The Victor Tolgesy Arts Award is named in his honor.
Tolgesy was born in Miskolc, Hungary on 22 August 1928. He emigrated to Canada in 1951.[2] He died in Ottawa, Ontario, 6 January 1980.Tolgesy was made a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts[3]
In 1966, a sculpture by Tolgesy, Freedom for Hungary - Freedom for All was installed in Budapest Park in Toronto to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Hungarian Uprising.[4]
The Victor Tolgesy Arts Award is presented jointly by the City of Ottawa and the Council for the Arts in Ottawa to recognize residents who have contributed to the cultural life of Ottawa. The first award was presented in 1987. The award consists of cash prize and a bronze casting of Tolgesy's 1963 sculpture Seed and Flower.[5]
Tolgesy, Victor. Acrobatics: A Tale of Fantasy and Reality in Words and Sculpture(Ottawa:Edahl Productions Limited, 1985), 9780969120537A 'modern fairy tale' illustrated with color photographs of the author's sculptures.