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Leo Putz

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Leo Putz
Self-portrait (1914)
Born(1869-06-18)18 June 1869
Died21 July 1940(1940-07-21)(aged 71)
EducationAcademy of Fine Arts Munich
Occupation(s)Artist, educator
Known forPainting
Style
Spouse
(m.1913)

Leo Putz(18 June 1869,Merano,South Tyrol,Austria-Hungary– 21 July 1940, Merano, Kingdom of Italy)[1]was aTyroleanpainter. His work encompassesArt Nouveau,Impressionismand the beginnings ofExpressionism.Figures, nudes and landscapes were his predominant subjects.

Life[edit]

Calm Day (1901)

His father, Karl Putz, was the Mayor of Merano.[2]He began his studies at the age of sixteen at theAcademy of Fine Arts Munich,where he studied with the history painterGabriel von Hackl.Convinced that he had great talent, his father sent him to theAcadémie Julianin Paris. After military service, he returned to Munich and studied withPaul Hoecker.[1]He opened his first studio in 1897. That same year, he became a member of theMunich Secession.He worked with the weekly magazineJugendand many of his paintings were reproduced on the magazine's title page. During this time, he also worked as a commercial artist, creating many posters in Art Nouveau style and billboards for the Moderne Galerie München.[citation needed]

The Staatsgalerie Dresden and the Neue Königliche Pinakothek acquired many of his works in 1903. He became anhonorary citizenofBavariain 1909; a prerequisite for becoming a Professor, for which he received appointment that same year.[2]

Between 1909 and 1914, he spent his summers at Schloss Hartmannsberg nearChiemgauto practiceplein-airpainting. While there, he took on several students, among them the American artistEdward Cucuel.It was also there that he created his best-known works; the two series known as the "Boat Pictures" and the "Bathers". In both, he focused on portraying beautiful young women, a prominent feature of his early work. In 1913, he married the landscape painterFrieda Blell.He relocated toGautingin 1922, where he built a house; trading his paintings for building materials.[2]

To Brazil and back[edit]

Adelheid (1927)

He and his family accepted an invitation to move to Brazil in 1929. At the request ofLúcio Costa,he took a professorship at theEscola Nacional de Belas Artesin 1931.[1]

There, he gave lectures on composition and took on several students, including the landscape architectRoberto Burle Marx.During his stay, his colors took on a more tropical flavor and the (for him) exotic plant life became a favorite subject. He would often travel to remote areas on muleback in search of inspiration. He returned to Germany in 1933. A selection of his South American works was the focus of an exhibition in Munich in 1935, which has been fiercely attacked by the Nazi propagandist newspaperDer Stürmerdue to the exotic nature of the depicted issues.[3]

Leo Putz is represented with two drawings of scenes do Rio de Janeiro in the collection of the Museu de Arte do Rio (MAR), a gift of Fundo Z.[citation needed]

Nazi era seizures and destruction of artworks[edit]

An opponent ofNational Socialism,Putz' art was labelled "degenerate".[2]Beginning in 1936, he was repeatedly interrogated by theGestapoand was forced to flee back to his native region, theSouth Tyrol.In 1937, he was officially banned from working in Germany. His watercolorZwei Akteand the printsLiegender FrauenaktandZwei Aktewere confiscated from the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Kassel in the Nazi "Degenerate Art" campaign and destroyed. He was banned from working in Germany. His watercolorDas Burggespenst(60 × 46 cm) was seized with the collection of the Jewish art dealerWalter Westfeldand sold at auction byKunsthaus Lempertzin 1939, after which its fate is unknown. It is listed on the German Lost Art Foundation (Lost Art-ID461012).[4][5]

For the remainder of his life, he concentrated on painting castles, villages and benign landscapes.[citation needed]

He died in 1940, following an operation. News of his death was suppressed in Italy and Germany[2]and he was quietly interred inGauting.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^abcEva Chrambach (2003),"Putz, Leo",Neue Deutsche Biographie(in German), vol. 21, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 23–24;(full text online)
  2. ^abcdeLeo Putz Information website
  3. ^Kraus, Carl; Obermair, Hannes (2019).Mythen der Diktaturen. Kunst in Faschismus und Nationalsozialismus – Miti delle dittature. Arte nel fascismo e nazionalsocialismo.Landesmuseum für Kultur- und Landesgeschichte Schloss Tirol. pp. 230–1, 242–3.ISBN978-88-95523-16-3.
  4. ^"Das Burggespenst".www.lostart.de.Lost Art-Datenbank.Retrieved2023-02-08.Walter Westfeld, Düsseldorf; 12./13.12.1939 Zwangsversteigerung Kunsthaus Lempertz, Köln, Nr. 263
  5. ^"Leo Putz".Austria Forum.1937 wurden in der Nazi-Aktion „Entartete Kunst "aus den Staatlichen Kunstsammlungen Kassel sein AquarellZwei Akteund die DruckgrafikenLiegender FrauenaktundZwei Aktebeschlagnahmt und vernichtet und er bekam Berufsverbot in Deutschland. Sein AquarellBurggespenst(60 × 46 cm) wurde mit der Sammlung des jüdischen Sammlers und Kunsthändlers Walter Westfeld beschlagnahmt und 1939 vom Kunsthaus Lempertz zwangsversteigert. Es gilt als verschollen

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