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Max Hermann Maxy (also known as M. H. Maxy, born Max Herman; October 26, 1895July 19, 1971) was a Romanian painter, art professor, scenographer, and professor of German-Jewish descent.[1][2]

Max Hermann Maxy
Born
Max Hermann

(1895-10-26)October 26, 1895
Brăila, Romania
DiedJuly 19, 1971(1971-07-19) (aged 75)
Bucharest, Romania
NationalityRomanian
Alma materBucharest National University of Arts
Known forPainting, Scenography
MovementExpressionism. Constructivism, Modernism
From the left: Tristan Tzara with M. H. Maxy, Ion Vinea & Jacques G. Costin
From the left: Tristan Tzara with M. H. Maxy, Ion Vinea & Jacques G. Costin

Early life and education


Maxy was born in Brăila in 1895, into a Jewish family.[1] In 1902, following his mother's early death,[3] he and his family moved to the national capital Bucharest.[2] Between 1913 and 1916, Maxy studied at the School of Fine Arts, where Camil Ressu and Frederic Storck were among his teachers. He fought in World War I, an experience which significantly influenced his painting.[1]


Career


Maxy, along with artists Iosif Ross and Iosif Steurer, organized an art exhibit in Iași in 1918 which depicted scenes from the World War I front;[1] it was in that year he started using the name "Maxy".[3] In 1922 and 1923, Maxy studied in Berlin, Germany, along with another Romanian artist named Arthur Segal.[1][2] During this time, he displayed some of his art in Berlin and joined the November Group, a Socialist German cultural organization which promoted expressionist art. Constructivism dominated Maxy's early works, but he later began painting in a moderate modernist style (noted for its realism and narrative mode). Throughout the 1920s and the 1930s, Maxy also displayed his art in Bucharest, often together with other artists.[1] He became a scenographer (set designer) for the Jewish theater in Bucharest in 1939. In 1941, when anti-Jewish legislation was passed in Romania, Maxy became the director of this theater.[2] During this time, Maxy also taught students excluded from the Romanian public education system at the private Jewish School of Arts. He became the director of the National Museum of Art of Romania and, in 1949, a university professor at the Nicolae Grigorescu Institute of Arts, as the School of Fine Arts was now called. Beginning in 1954, he received many awards from the Communist Romanian government, including the title "artist emerit" (meaning "emeritus artist").[1] Maxy died in Bucharest in 1971, at the age of 75.[2] His works are shown in many Romanian art exhibits in Bucharest, Prague, Moscow, Berlin, Warsaw, Budapest, Sofia, Belgrade, Athens, Cairo, Damascus, and Istanbul.[1]


References


  1. "YIVO | Maxy, Max Hermann". Yivoencyclopedia.org. Retrieved 2014-01-16.
  2. ""Judaica" - Personalities". Judaica.ro. Retrieved 2014-01-16.
  3. Prügel, Roland (2008). Im Zeichen der Stadt: Avantgarde in Rumänien, 19201938. Köln: Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar. p. 79. ISBN 978-3-412-16406-5.

На других языках


[de] M. H. Maxy

M. H. Maxy (eigentlich Max Hermann; * 26. Oktober 1895 in Brăila/Rumänien; † 19. Juli 1971 in Bukarest) war ein rumänischer Maler und Universitätsprofessor deutsch-jüdischer Abstammung. Er gilt als einer der führenden Vertreter avantgardistischer Kunst aus Rumänien in der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts.
- [en] Max Hermann Maxy

[fr] Max Hermann Maxy

Max Hermann Maxy (également connu sous le nom de M. H. Maxy, né Max Herman le 26 octobre 1895 à Brăila et mort le 19 juillet 1971, est un peintre roumain, professeur d'art, scénographe et professeur d'origine juive allemande.

[it] Max Hermann Maxy

Max Hermann Maxy (Brăila, 26 ottobre 1895 – Bucarest, 19 luglio 1971) è stato un pittore, scenografo e accademico rumeno di origine ebraica. Nacque nel 1895 a Brăila ma la famiglia si trasferì presto a Bucarest[1], dove tra il 1913 e il 1916 frequentò i corsi della Scuola delle Belle Arti ed ebbe come insegnanti Frederic Storck e Camil Ressu. Combatté nella prima guerra mondiale e nel 1918, e insieme agli artisti I. Ross e I. Steurer, organizzò una mostra a Iași con scene sul fronte. La sua prima mostra, in cui espose molte delle tele con scene di guerra, fu aperta nel 1920 a Bucarest, e nel 1921 partecipò alla mostra della Società di Arte Rumena.



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