Wholesale China Oil Painting & Frame

Oil Paintings & Talent Artists From Oil Painting Studio Directly!


Prev       Next     

 

Mihaly Munkacsy Study for Golgotha oil painting on canvas

Click to Enlarge
Study for Golgotha
1882 Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest
Painting ID::  2797



Order Oil Painting With Standard Size



Mihaly Munkacsy
1844-1900 Hungarian Mihaly Munkacsy Locations Munkacsy started to paint during the years he spent in Arad as a joiner. With the help of partons be studied at the Viennese, Munich and Dusseldorf academies. Munkacsy painted his first major work, the outstanding "The Condemned Cell" in D??sseldorf, in 1872, together with his friend Laszlo Paal, he moved to Paris, where be lived until the end of his life. Munkacsy painted his genres in the style of realism between 1873 and 1875: "Midnight Ramblers", "Farewell". "Churning Woman", "Woman Carryng Brushwood", and "Pawnshop" were the zenith of his career. He married the widow of Baron de Marches in 1874, and his style changed from that time on. Departing from the typical subjects of realism, be produced colourful salon paintings and still-lifes. This was the period when be also turned to ladscape painting; his growing interest is marked by such great paintings as "Dusty Road". "Corn Field", and "Walking in the Woods". The assimilation of Laszlo Paal's style is apparent in the landscapes painted during the 1880s, such as "Avenue" and "The Colpach Park". His realist portraits - e.g. of Franz Liszt and Cardinal Haynald - were also born around this time, together with his religions paintings, such as "Christ in front of Pilate", "Golgotha" and later, "Ecce homo". Towards the end of his career he painted two monumental works: "Hungarian Conquest" for the House of Parliament and a fresco entitled "Apotheosis of Renaissance, for the ceiling Kunsthistoriches. Museum in Vienna.
Study for Golgotha
1882 Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest

Related Paintings to Mihaly Munkacsy :.
| The Ship of Fools (mk05) | detalj fran dodens triumf.omkr | Pierre Corneille | View of Geelong | An Avalanche in the Alps |


Prev       Next     

  

  

  

  

CONTACT US
Contact us!