Dimensions: 59 x 49 cm
On the reverse a paper sticker with a description in Swedish concerning the purchase of the painting in 1901 by a certain Johnny Roosval for 50 marks, on the cardboard back two paper exhibition stickers and a sticker of a framing workshop, on the frame a paper deposit sticker of the National Museum in Warsaw
Origins
collection of art historian Johnny August Emanuel Roosval (1879-1965), Sweden
private collection, United Kingdom
Agra-Art auction house, December 2011
private collection, Poland
Exhibited
Olga Boznańska (1865-1940), National Museum in Warsaw, February 26-May 2, 2015
Olga Boznańska (1865-1940), National Museum in Krakow, October 25, 2014 - February 1, 2015
Literature
Olga Boznańska 1865-1940, exhibition catalog, ed. by Ewa Bobrowska, Urszula Kozakowska-Zaucha, National Museum in Krakow, Krakow 2014, p. 124 (il.), cat. no. I.15.
Biography
One of the most outstanding Polish artists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Initially, the artist was given drawing lessons by her mother, Eugenia Mondan; between 1883-86, the artist studied under Kazimierz Pochwalski and Józef Siedlecki. She also attended the A. Baraniecki Higher Courses for Women in Cracow, where Hipolit Lipinski and Antoni Piotrowski gave her lessons. In 1886-1889 she studied at the Munich Academy of Fine Arts under Karl Kricheldorf and Wilhelm Dürr. In Munich, she opened her own studio, remaining under the tutelage of Jozef Brandt and Alfred Wierusz-Kowalski. In 1895, replacing Theodor Hummel, she took over the management of the Painting School run by him. In 1898, she settled permanently in Paris. She was a member of the Society of Polish Artists "Sztuka", the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts and the Polish Literary and Artistic Society in Paris, as well as the International Society of Sculptors, Engravers and Painters in London. Since 1886, when she made her debut at the Cracow Society of Friends of Fine Arts, she presented her works at exhibitions in Poland, Europe and the United States, including Berlin (1892, 1893, 1913.), Munich (1893), Prague, London and Paris (1896), Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh (1901, 1906, 1907, 1920-28), Vienna (1902, 1908), Amsterdam (1912) and Venice (1910, 1914, 1938). She was honored with numerous awards, including a gold medal at the Munich International Exhibition (1905), the French Legion of Honor (1912), the Grand Prix at the Expo Exhibition in Paris (1939) and the Order of Polonia Restituta (1938). She was first and foremost a portraitist; the images she created of both famous people and ordinary models are part of the trend of expressive modernist portraiture. In her paintings, the artist focused on the model's face, conveying the state of his psyche and the mood of the moment. He also painted still lifes and flowers, as well as interiors, especially of his own studios.