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Olga Boznańska. Kraków – Munich – Paris

Olga Boznańska (1865-1940) painting at an easel in the studio of her home in ul. Wolska 21 in Kraków, ca. 1920. Paper photo, 12.2 x 16.9 cm, National Museum in Warsaw/Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie, Inv. Nr. DI 97315/1

Mediathek Sorted

Media library
  • Ill. 1: Study of a Girl in a Hat with a Feather - Oil on cardboard canvas, 58 x 44 cm
  • Ill. 2: Monk drinking wine - Oil on canvas, 81.5 x 65,2 cm
  • Ill. 3: Portrait of a Young Woman with a Red Parasol - Oil on canvas, 88 x 60 cm
  • Ill. 4: Gypsy Woman - Oil on canvas, 65 x 53 cm
  • Ill. 5: Flower girl - Oil on canvas, 65 x 86 cm
  • Ill. 6: Japanese Woman - Oil on wood, 37 x 21 cm
  • Ill. 7: After a Walk (Lady in a White Dress) - Oil on canvas, 161.5 x 100 cm
  • Ill. 8: Portrait of Zofia Federowicz - Oil on canvas, 150 x 100 cm
  • Ill. 9: Breton Woman II - Oil on canvas 53 x 42 cm
  • Ill. 10: In the Orangery - Oil on canvas, 235 x 180 cm
  • Ill. 11: On Good Friday - Oil on canvas, 240 x 158 cm
  • Ill. 12: Girl with a Vegetable Basket in the Garden - , 1891. Oil on canvas, 125 x 85 cm
  • Ill. 13: Portrait of a Boy in School Uniform - Oil on canvas, 180 x 100 cm
  • Ill. 14: Portrait of a Woman - Oil on canvas, 122 x 80 cm
  • Ill. 15: Portrait of a Woman with a Japanese Parasol - Oil on canvas, 65 x 52 cm
  • Ill. 16: Kasper Żelechowski (1863-1942): Olga Boznańska with a Japanese parasol - Krakow, photograph on albumen paper, 18.4 x 11.5 cm
  • Ill. 17: In the Studio - Oil on paperboard, 49 x 75 cm
  • Ill. 18: Portrait of Paul Nauen - Oil on canvas, 121 x 91 cm
  • Ill. 19: Self Portrait - Oil on canvas, 70 x 57 cm
  • Ill. 20: Self Portrait - Oil on paperboard, 55.2 x 42.5 cm
  • Ill. 21: Self Portrait - Pastel on paper, 102 x 65 cm
  • Ill. 22: Study of a Woman with a Girl - Oil on paperboard, 56.5 x 43 cm
  • Ill. 23: Girl with Chrysanthemums - Oil on paperboard, 88.5 x 69 cm
  • Ill. 24: Portrait of a Woman in a White Blouse - Oil on paperboard, 67 x 48 cm
  • Ill. 25: Girl in the Garden - Oil on paperboard, 65,5 x 42 cm
  • Ill. 26: Two Children on the Stairs - Oil on paperboard, 102 x 75 cm
  • Ill. 27: In the studio in Munich - Olga Boznańska in her studio in Georgenstraße, 1896/98. Paper photograph, 12.5 x 9.4 cm
  • Ill. 28: Portrait of the painter Anna Saryusz Zaleska - Oil on paperboard, 68 x 64 cm
  • Ill. 29: Portrait of the painter Antoni Kamieński - Oil on paperboard, 95 x 49.5 cm
  • Ill. 30: Portrait of a Woman in a Blue Blouse - Oil on cardboard auf paperboard, 69 x 43 cm
  • Ill. 31: Grandmother’s Name Day - Oil on canvas, 79 x 60 cm
  • Ill. 32: Portrait of Two Girls, Helena und Władysława Chmielarczyk - Oil on cardboard, 95 x 67 cm, painted over by Alfons Karpiński
  • Ill. 33: Portrait of the Architect Franciszek Mączyński - Oil on paperboard, 72 x 68.5 cm
  • Ill. 34: Portrait of the Painter Maria Koźniewska-Kalinowska - Oil on canvas, 73 x 53.5 cm
  • Ill. 35: Portrait of the Pianist August Radwan - Oil and tempera on canvas on paperboard, 75 x 80.3 cm
  • Ill. 36: Portrait of Zofia Kirkor-Kiedroń - 1903-05. Oil on paperboard, 99 x 68 cm
  • Ill. 37: Portrait of Ludwig Puget - Oil on canvas, 47 x 38 cm
  • Ill. 38: Portrait of Miss Jadwiga Papara from Lviv - Oil on paperboard, 117 x 91 cm
  • Ill. 39: Portrait of a Lady in a Red Hat - Post 1900. Pastel, 75 x 56.5 cm
  • Ill. 40: Portrait of a Young Man in Black - Oil on paperboard, 92 x 46.5 cm
  • Ill. 41: Portrait of a Woman in a Brown Dress - Oil on paperboard, 98.5 x 74.5 cm
  • Ill. 42: Bolesław Biegas: Bust of Olga Boznańska - Bronze, 52 x 27 x 18 cm
  • Ill. 43: Interior of the Artist’s Studio in Kraków - Oil on paperboard, 50.5 x 73 cm
  • Ill. 44: Self Portrait - Pastel, gouache, chalk on cardboard, 74 x 43.5 cm
  • Ill. 45: Place des Ternes in Paris - Oil on paperboard, 14 x 24 cm
  • Ill. 46: In the Studio - Oil on paperboard, 68 x 44 cm
  • Ill. 47: View from the Krakòw Studio - Oil on paperboard, 50 x 39 cm
  • Ill. 48: Self Portrait - Post 1913. Oil on paperboard, 55.2 x 46 cm.
  • Ill. 49: Olga Boznańska on the sofa with a cigarette - In the studio of her house at ul. Wolska 21 in Krakow. Photograph, 16.9 x 12.2 cm.
  • Ill. 50: Still Life - Oil on paperboard, 38.5 x 57.5 cm
  • Ill. 51: Poppies - Post 1920. Oil on paperboard, 46 x 38 cm
  • Ill. 52: Red Flowers - 1925-30. Oil on cardboard, 35 x 25.5 cm
  • Ill. 53: Flowers - Oil on wood, 29.5 x 41 cm
  • Ill. 54: Portrait of a Lady - Oil on paperboard, 80 x 65 cm
  • Ill. 55: Portrait of Mrs Drzewiecka - Post 1925. Oil on cardboard, 50 x 35 cm
  • Ill. 56: Portrait of Miss Ellen - Post 1925. Oil on cardboard, 79 x 51.5 cm
  • Ill. 57: Portrait of Dr. Mélanie Lipińska - Oil on paperboard, 62.5 x 41.5 cm
  • Ill. 58: Portrait of Miss Syrewicz - Oil on cardboard, 55 x 33.5 cm
  • Ill. 59: Portrait of Julia Rylska - Writer and translator. Oil on cardboard, 69.5 x 48.5 cm
  • Ill. 60: Portrait of Maria Pfitzner - Oil on paperboard, 75 x 46 cm, unsigned
  • Ill. 61: Portrait of Zofia Kulaszyńska - Oil on cardboard, 47 x 35 cm, unsigned
Olga Boznańska – Kraków, Munich, Paris
Olga Boznańska (1865-1940) painting at an easel in the studio of her home in ul. Wolska 21 in Kraków, ca. 1920. Paper photo, 12.2 x 16.9 cm, National Museum in Warsaw/Muzeum Narodowe w Warszawie, Inv. Nr. DI 97315/1

Olga Helena Karolina h. Nowina Boznańska was born in Kraków on 15. April 1865. Her mother Eugénie Mondant (1832-1892), was a teacher who came from the French Département of Ardèche; and her father, Adam Gustaw h. Nowina Boznański (1836-1906) was a railway engineer who had trained in Vienna. The family lived in a broad, but not very expensive house that her father had built in the  ul. Wolska 21 in 1870, and in which the painter kept a studio for the rest of her life.[1] Her sister Iza was born in 1868. At the age of six Olga received her first drawing lessons from her mother. In 1878 and 1881 the family visited the World Exhibitions in Paris and Vienna. Starting in 1883 Olga received drawing lessons in her parents’ house, from the painters Józef Wojciech Siedlecki (1841-1915) and Kazimierz Pochwalski (1855-1940). She spent her summer holidays in Zakopane. In the following year she began her art studies at the College of Women’s Courses/Wyższe Kursy dla Kobiet , set up and headed by the social activist, Adrian Baraniecki (1828-1891), because women were not allowed to study at the traditional Kraków School of Fine Arts/Szkoła Sztuk Pięknych. She was hugely impressed by the courses in art history given by the academic, Marian Sokołowski (1839-1911) and the literary critic, art critic and historian, Konstanty Maria Górski (1862-1909). Her painting and drawing teachers were the figure and genre painter, Hipolit Lipiński (1846-1884), and the genre and portrait painter, Antoni Piotrowski (1853-1924), both of whom were representatives of the school of realist, colourful and intricate history painters. As a rule students drew portraits from heads made of plaster-of-Paris, and only occasionally from living models. 40 years later Boznańska condemned all her training as an utter waste of time.[2]

In October 1885 (or 1886) Boznańska moved to Munich to continue her art studies because all her life she felt that Kraków was so sad and fearsome.[3] At the time the capital of the kingdom of Bavaria had been the favourite place of refuge for Polish art students for the past two decades. Above all, after the January uprising in 1863, a huge number of painting students who had taken part in the uprising, went into exile in Munich. One of these was Józef Brandt (1841-1915), who began his studies at the Royal Academy of Pictorial Arts in 1863 and opened his own studio in Munich three years later: this soon attracted so many other Polish students that it became the centre of the Munich “Polish colony”.[4] Thanks to its lively art and gallery scene, the two Pinakotheks, the high quality of the professors teaching at the Academy and the tolerant attitudes of its inhabitants, the Bavarian capital was a highly attractive place for foreign students. Even Jan Matejko (1838-1893), who was derided as a dry conservative director at the Kraków School of Art, had studied in Munich in 1858. Above all in the 60s and 70s a number of Polish painters who soon became well-known and indeed famous, had trained in Munich at the Art Academy and at private painting schools: these included Maksymilian and Aleksander Gierymski, Władysław Czachórski, Adam Chmielowski, Józef Chełmoński, Jan Chełmiński, Wojciech Kossak, Alfred Wierusz-Kowalski and Julian Fałat.

 

[1] The current adress of the unchanged house is ul. Piłsudskiego 21, cf.  http://krakow-przewodnik.com.pl/uliczkami-i-placami/ulica-pilsudskiego/, Dom no. 21. Boznańska’s studio in the attic can still be recognised.

[2] Urszula Kozakowska-Zaucha: Great, Truly Great Artist. The Krakw of Olga Boznańska, in: Exhibition cat. Olga Boznańska, Krakòw 2014, page 26

[3] ibid. page 28

[4] “Die Polenkolonie: Brandt, Gierymski, Chelminski, Kowalski, Kozakiewicz“, in: Adolf Rosenberg: Die Münchner Malerschule in ihrer Entwicklung seit 1871, Leipzig 1887, page 47