MúzeumDigitár
CTRL + Y
en
Magyar Nemzeti Galéria Jelenkori Gyűjtemény [JEO_MM83.299]
Modellezők (Magyar Nemzeti Galéria CC BY-NC-SA)
Provenance/Rights: Magyar Nemzeti Galéria (CC BY-NC-SA)
1 / 1 Previous<- Next->

Modellers

Cite this page Data sheet (PDF) Canonical version (record) Calculate distance to your current location Mark for comparison Graph view

Description

Modellers is one of Tibor Csernus’s outstanding works from his surnaturalist period. The term surnaturalism – in relation to Hungarian painting in the 1960s – was used in connection with Csernus’s special painting method by the young artists gathered around him (László Lakner, Ákos Szabó, László Gyémánt among others) . The visual details he created with elaborate naturalism were “fractured” by the artist with his own scraping method which, with the tachistic elements and the picture plane’s closed nature, resulted in a surrealistic impression. He got acquainted with this technique – through Simon Hantai among others – during a study trip to Paris between 1957 and 1958. The artist was passionately devoted to the theme of flying and had been building airplane models of his own design from a young age. He dedicated this work to the memory of the pilot György Endresz, who flew across the Atlantic Ocean in record time in 1931.

Material/Technique

canvas / oil

Measurements

140 × 182 cm

Magyar Nemzeti Galéria

Object from: Magyar Nemzeti Galéria

Az 1957-ben alapított Magyar Nemzeti Galéria az ország egyik legnagyobb múzeuma, a magyar képzőművészet legnagyobb gyűjteménye. Gyűjtőköre az...

[Last update: ]

Usage and citation

The textual information presented here is free for non-commercial usage if the source is named. (Creative Commons Lizenz 3.0, by-nc-sa) Please name as source not only the internet representation but also the name of the museum.
Rights for the images are shown below the large images (which are accessible by clicking on the smaller images). If nothing different is mentioned there the same regulation as for textual information applies.
Any commercial usage of text or image demands communication with the museum.