István Burchard-Bélaváry (February 4, 1864, in Mád, Zemplén County, Austrian Empire – October 21, 1933, in Pestszentlőrinc, Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian painter.
Istvan Burchard Bélaváry | |
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Born | February 4, 1864 |
Died | October 21, 1933 |
Nationality | Hungarian |
Occupation | Painter |
Signature | |
Biography
editAfter schooling at Theresianum in Vienna, he turned to the arts. He lived eight years from 1887 in United States. He participated in California in a humorous illustration of newspaper, "The Weekly Jonah" and then studied at the San Francisco Art Institute (1889-1890) and work independently. He painted still lifes, genre scenes, landscapes and portraits. He returned to Europe in 1894. His masters are Anton Ažbe in Munich (1895-1896) and Filippo Colarossi at the Académie Colarossi in Paris (1897-1898). He invented in 1899 a special technique: "Glycerin distemper." It sales its patent in 1907 to Reeves and Sons which reports the process in UK under the name "Bélaváry pasteloid colors". Then he makes a long stay in Italy and married in Florence in 1899.[citation needed]
He moved with his family to Pozsony in 1904. He led his own school of painting and was elected director of the Association of Fine Arts of Pozsony[1] then director of the Salon of Pozsony in 1911. It organizes various exhibitions, including one in London in 1907. He moved to Budapest in 1918. He is active in Budapest and Debrecen.[citation needed]
He is the son of Gustave Burchard-Bélavary of Bélavar and Szikava (1829 Eperjes - 1903 Budapest), officer, professor of economics and commercial law, writer and painter, and Louise von Bukowski Stolzenburg († 1913). He married Enrica Coppini (1872-1960), painter.[citation needed]
Gallery
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Hussards (Huszárok), 1911
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Sailboats (Tengeri vitorlások)
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Galloping horses (Vágtató ménes)
Bibliography
edit- Éber László, Művészeti Lexikon - Győző Andor Kiadása, Budapest, 1933
- Akadémiai Kiadó, Művészeti Lexikon, Budapest, 1966
- Dr. Szabó - Kállai, Magyar festők és grafikusok életrajzi lexikona, Nyíregyháza, 1997
Notes
edit- ^ Alexander Jásznigi, Imre Parlagi : Das geistige Ungarn: biographisches lexikon, Ed. W. Braumüller, 1918