Edward Wittig
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Edward Wittig (1879–1941) was a Polish sculptor and university professor, notable for designing many monuments in Warsaw.
Born on September 20, 1879 in Warsaw, Wittig went on to study art at the Viennese Academy of Fine Arts under the tutelage of J. Tautenheim between 1897 and 1900. He then moved to Paris, where he graduated from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. His tutor there was Madeleine Jouvray, a pupil of Auguste Rodin and Lucien Schnegg. One of his friends during this period was Magnus Enckell. In 1909 he returned to Poland and settled in Podolia, in a residence owned by friends. There he prepared a number of sculptures, some of which were presented at the Paris Salon. After 1903, he was invited to display his work at every Salon. His works were also featured at the Zachęta gallery in Warsaw (since 1900), at the Society of Friends of Fine Arts of Kraków and the Venice Biennale in 1920 and 1934.
Between 1915 and 1920 he was one of the professors of the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw, and was subsequently a professor at the Warsaw University of Science and Technology. Initially a student of Rodin, in the early 1900s Wittig developed his own style, with stronger contrasts and less symbolism. Finally, prior to World War I his style became heavily influenced by Aristide Maillol and the so-called New Classicism, which emphasised monumental, cubic and rough silhouettes lacking detail. Among the first such sculptures is Eve of 1911, featured in both Trocadéro garden in Paris and the Park Ujazdowski in Warsaw.
In the 1920s Wittig's style became very popular in Poland and abroad, mostly due to its monumentalism, which was a leading trend in Polish architecture of 1920's and 1930's. As a result of which he went on to create numerous monuments. Among the most notable are the monuments to Polish Military Organization in front of the Zachęta, which was destroyed by the Germans prior to the Warsaw Uprising, but reconstructed in 1999, and the 1931 monument to World War I airmen, which the Germans destroyed by removing the sculpture from the top in 1940, but was rebuilt in 1968 by Alfred Jesion. In 1932 he also prepared the monument to Juliusz Słowacki, which was not erected until 2001, well after his death in Warsaw in 1941, during the Nazi occupation of Poland.
[edit] References
- (1973) Dariusz Kaczmarzyk: Rzeźba polska od XVI do początku XX wieku. Warsaw: National Museum of Poland, 148+549.
- Stanisław Rutkowski (1925). Edward Wittig.
- Władysław Kozicki (1925). Edward Wittig. Rozwój twórczości.