Johann Ignaz Cimbal (1722 – 27 December 1795) was an Austrian painter and etcher, who produced many altarpieces and frescoes for churches, monasteries and other Church buildings. He painted many works in Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, Vienna and Hungary.
Johann Ignaz Cimbal | |
---|---|
Born | 1722 Wagstadt |
Died | 27 December 1795 | (aged 72–73)
Occupation | Austrian painter |
Life
editHe was born in Wagstadt and attended the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna from 1742 until he graduated in 1753. He may have been a foundling at the Brothers of Charity and also may have been taught some painting before 1742; documentary evidence is scant. Cimbal became friends with the painter Felix Ivo Leicher and the sculptor Raymond Sieß, whom he may have met in Vienna. Sieß sponsored some of Cimbal's children at their baptisms.[1]
He decorated many churches and monasteries for the Hospitaller Order of St. John of God in Brno and Feldsberg, working alongside other painters Johann Jablonský and Ignaz Mayer the Elder.[2]
Family
editHe married in 1760,[3] to Josefa Oblasser, a daughter of the painter Wolfgang Oblasser.[1] The two had many children, but only two sons and two daughters survived their father. Both sons were painters: Jakob (born 7 January 1778 in Vienna, died 24 January 1834 in Vienna) was at the Vienna Academy in 1796 and he was recorded as an "academic painter" in 1823 in Leopoldstadt,[1] and Johann (born 1754, died after 1808 in Vienna).[4] Both sons assisted their father with his work, as was usual for the time.[1]
Reputation
editIn his lifetime, Cimbal was in demand as a painter, and his clients were satisfied with his work. Since his death, however, he has been less adulated: his works have been described as dry and sourced from a limited inventory, and his detailing sometimes clumsy. His earlier work is looked on somewhat more kindly than his later work. Some details suggest that he was gifted, but that he worked in disharmony with his workshop and assistants. Modern critics have called him a "typical provincial painter", at odds with his training as a painter from the Vienna Academy.[3]
References
edit- Lubomír Slavíček (1999). "Johann Cimbal as Etcher". Ex Fumo Lucem. Baroque Studies in Honour of Klára Garas presented on Her Eightieth Birthday II. Szépmüveszeti Muzeum. pp. 97–116. ISBN 963-7441-68-9.
- Garas, K (1955). Magyarországi festészet a XVIII. században. pp. 60–62, 211–212.
- "Johann Ignaz Cimbal". Saur Allgemeines Künstlerlexikon. Vol. 19. 1998. pp. 228–229.
- ^ a b c d Rikal, Patricia (2013). Johann Cimbal in Österreich (master's thesis). University of Vienna.
- ^ Arijčuk, Petr (2011). "Johann Ignaz Cimbal a malíři pracující pro řád milosrdných bratří na Moravě v druhé polovině 18. století" [Johann Ignaz Cimbal and painters working for the Hospitaller Order of St. John of God in Moravia in the second half of the 18th century]. Opuscula Historiae Artium. 60 [55] (1): 2–19. ISSN 1211-7390.
- ^ a b László Kostyál (1987). "Johann Ignaz Cimbal Zala megyében" (PDF). Zalai Múzeum I: 179–189.
- ^ Anna Jávor. "Cimbal, Johann Ignaz". Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2014-01-23.