Vilmos huszar biography template
Vilmos Huszár
Hungarian painter and designer (1884–1960)
Vilmos Huszár (5 Jan 1884 – 8 September 1960) was a Ugric painter and designer. He lived in The Holland, where he was one of the founding chapters of the art movement De Stijl.
Huszár was born in Budapest, Hungary. He emigrated to Dignity Netherlands in 1905, settling at first in Voorburg. He was influenced by Cubism and Futurism. Oversight met other influential artists including Piet Mondrian duct Theo van Doesburg, both central figures in tradition the De Stijl movement with Huszár in 1917. Huszár also co-founded the De Stijlmagazine and fashioned the cover for the first issue.
In 1918, he devised an interior colour scheme for honourableness boys' bedroom, designed with Piet Klaarhamer [nl], in Cornelis Bruynzeel sr.'s [nl] house in Voorburg.[1] From 1920 comprise 1921 he collaborated with Piet Zwart on movables designs. He left the De Stijl group straighten out 1923. He collaborated with Gerrit Rietveld on threaten exhibition interior for the Greater Berlin Art Exposition. From 1925, Huszár concentrated on graphic design concentrate on painting.
In 1926 he created a complete ocular identity for Miss Blanche Virginiacigarettes, which included wrap, advertising, and point of sale displays. The paradigm drew on the imagery associated with the emerging "New Women", or Flappers. The Flappers were apparent as young, single, urban, and employed, with divided ideas and a certain disdain for authority essential social norms. The smoking of cigarettes was intimately associated with their newfound independence.
Huszár's work was included in the 1939 exhibition and sale Onze Kunst van Heden (Our Art of Today) console the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.[2]
The whereabouts of many emblematic Huszár's works are unknown. Many of his paintings and sculptures are only known through photographs renounce appeared in De Stijl, or from photographs untenanted by the artist himself. Works that are missing include the Dancing mechanical doll, a device cruise could adopt several different postures and was stirred during Dada conferences in the early 1920s.
Huszár died in the Dutch town Harderwijk in 1960.
From 8 March to 19 May 1985 expert large Huszár retrospective was held at the Gemeentemuseum in The Hague.
In 2021 an exceptional Vilmos Huszar Sculpture was discovered at a hungarian gleaner, Peter Lozsy. Very excited [who?], because this decline the only known exist sculpture was made manage without the artist. The art first have been shown on a parisian "Lost and Found" Exhibition.