Georg Eisler: Difference between revisions
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== Further reading == |
== Further reading == |
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* Eisler, Georg, "My Father" in [[David Blake|Blake, David]]{{Disambiguation needed|date=June 2011}} (ed.), ''Hanns Eisler: A Miscellany.'' [[Routledge]], 1995. ISBN |
* Eisler, Georg, "My Father" in [[David Blake|Blake, David]]{{Disambiguation needed|date=June 2011}} (ed.), ''Hanns Eisler: A Miscellany.'' [[Routledge]], 1995. ISBN 3-7186-5575-6 |
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== References == |
== References == |
Revision as of 10:08, 8 May 2012
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (May 2010) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Georg Eisler was an Austrian painter from the school of Oskar Kokoschka who lived from 1928 to 1998. His father Hanns Eisler was a composer and his mother Charlotte Eisler, née Demant a well-known singer and music teacher.
His subject matter themes have included landscapes (often industrial featuring the north of England where he had lived after evacuating from Austria in 1936), group or crowd scenes (including jazz clubs and public transport) as well as nudes and still lifes. He returned to Vienna in 1946 where he died in 1998.
Eisler lectured at various universities including the Berlin University of the Arts (Udk), HFBK Hamburg, Stanford University, the University of New Mexico, and the University of Southern California.
Life
Out of political reasons, his mother left Austria in 1936 and lived in with Georg for two years in Moscow. They then went to Prague and in 1939 to England, after the Nazi invasion of Austria. In Manchester Georg attended Manchester Central High School for Boys and later became a student at the Stockport School of Art and Manchester Academy. He was introduced to Oskar Kokoschka, the famed expressionist artist, in London, who agreed to give him lessons. In 1946 he returned to Vienna to continue his art studies but never lost touch with England. In 1970 the famed conductor, Otto Klemperer commissioned Eisler to design the sets and costumes for Mozart's "Magic Flute" at Covent Garden Royal Opera House. In 1968 he was elected President of the Vienna Secession, and served two terms. In this capacity he initiated the successful Secession show at London's Royal Academy. He also had several one-man shows in England. One was the show at the Manchester City Art Gallery in 1988 (which resulted in a BBC program) and at the Fisher Fine Art Gallery in London in 1989. He exhibited his work in numerous venues around Europe, including participation in the 1982 Venice Biennale. He also commenced his career as a major book illustrator. He taught regularly at the Salzburg Simmer Academy and several times at the German Summer School run by the University of New Mexico in Taos. A major retrospective of his work was presented at the Belvedere Museum in Vienna in 2001 and another at the Albertina Museum in Vienna in 2001. His work is in the permanent collections of the Albertina, the Portrait Gallery of the British Museum in London, the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris and the Nationalgalerie in Berlin. In 2003 the Leica Company celebrated his lifelong friendship with Cartier Bresson by presenting a joint show of their work in Vienna. Annually, the Georg Eisler Medal is awarded to the outstanding young artist in Austria. Georg Eisler died in 1998 and is survived by his wife Alice, who resides in Vienna. One can see some of his works dedicated to the Shoah in the TV series " Holocaust"(1978), in which they are known as " Karl Weiss' drawings".
Further reading
- Eisler, Georg, "My Father" in Blake, David[disambiguation needed] (ed.), Hanns Eisler: A Miscellany. Routledge, 1995. ISBN 3-7186-5575-6