Boris Kalin

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Boris Kalin
Born June 24, 1905(1905-06-24)
Solkan, Gorizia and Gradisca, Austria-Hungary
Died May 22, 1975 (aged 69)
Ljubljana, Slovenia,

Yugoslavia

Nationality Slovene
Field sculpture
Training Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb
Movement realism, idealism
Works Fifteen-year-old Girl,
A Portrait of Marshal Tito,
Monument to the People's Liberation War
Influenced by Ivan Meštrović, Lojze Dolinar
Influenced Marjan Keršič - Belač, Stojan Batič, Jakob Savinšek, Drago Tršar, Janez Lenassi, Slavko Tihec
Awards Prešeren Award
1947 Fifteen-year-old Girl
1948
A Portrait of Marshall Tito
1950
Monument to the People's Liberation War

Boris Kalin (June 24, 1905May 22, 1975) was a Slovene sculptor.

[edit] Biography

Kalin was born in Solkan, which was then a suburb of the Austro-Hungarian town of Gorizia and is now part of Nova Gorica, Slovenia. He frequented the technical secondary school in Ljubljana and continued his studies between 1924 and 1929 at the Zagreb Academy of Fine Arts with the professors Rudolf Valdec, Frano Kršinić, Ivo Kredić and Ivan Meštrović. Between the years 1945 and 1970, Kalin taught sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Ljubljana; he was also its dean for two terms. He educated numerous generations of younger colleagues who have become prominent European creators. Kalin was one of the few Slovene sculptors who mastered stone carving. In 1953 he became a full member of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts.

He died in Ljubljana. His younger brother Zdenko Kalin was also a renowned sculptor.

[edit] Work

Boris Kalin mainly created classically formed portraits, public monuments and acts.

For his work he was bestowed with Prešeren Award three times: in 1947 for his statue "The Fifteen-year-old Girl" (Petnajstletna) that was said to represent his daughter, in 1948 for his statue "A Portrait of Marshal Tito" (Portret Maršala Tita), and in 1950 for his "Monument to the People's Liberation War" (Spomenik narodnoosvobodilni borbi) in Vrhnika.

Some of his sculptures are kept in the mansion Brdo pri Kranju as part of the representative collection of modern Slovenian art.

[edit] References

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