Gabriela von Habsburg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gabriela von Habsburg | |
Born | Gabriela Maria Charlotte Felicitas Elisabeth Antonia October 14, 1956 Luxembourg City, Luxembourg |
---|---|
Title | Princess Imperial and Archduchess of Austria, Princess Royal of Hungary and Bohemia |
Spouse | Christian Meister (divorced) |
Children | Severin, Lioba and Alena Meister |
Relatives | Otto, Crown Prince of Austria and Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen |
|
Gabriela von Habsburg, (born 14 October 1956) is a German sculptor and the granddaughter of Charles I, last Emperor of Austria. Her main works are abstract stainless steel sculptures, but also include stone-printed lithographies. She is also known as Archduchess Gabriela of Austria.
Contents |
[edit] Birth
Gabriela von Habsburg was born in Luxemburg, the fourth child of Crown Prince Otto of Austria and his wife, Princess Regina of Saxe-Meiningen and Hildburghausen. She was baptised with the names Gabriela Maria Charlotte Felicitas Elisabeth Antonia. She has the title Princess Imperial and Archduchess of Austria, Princess Royal of Hungary and Bohemia, with the style Imperial and Royal Highness. She was raised at her parents' home, Villa Austria, in Pöcking, Bavaria.
[edit] Education and career
After graduating in 1976, Gabriela von Habsburg studied philosophy for two years at the University of Munich. From 1978 to 1982, she studied art at the Munich Academy of Arts with Robert Jacobsen and Eduardo Paolozzi.
Since 2001, she has been an art professor at the Academy of Arts of Tbilisi, Georgia. From 2001 to 2005, she was a professor at the Summer Academy of Arts in Neuburg an der Donau, Germany.
[edit] Exhibitions
Gabriela von Habsburg has several exhibitions every year. While her focus was more on western Europe and the United States until the 1990s, she now has more exhibitions in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Some of her main sculptures (up to 40 ft high) can be seen in public places.
- since 1989 Autoren Galerie 1, Munich, Germany
- since 1989 Susan Conway Carrol Galery, Washington D.C.
- since 2000 Galerie Leupi, Zofingen, Switzerland
- since 2007 Drissien Galerie, Munich, Germany
[edit] Public installations
- 2007 Moument of the Rose Revolution in Georgia[1]
- 2007 Fountain "Horseshoe and Wheel", Astana, Kazakhstan
- 2004 Skulpturschweiz Foundation Sculpture park, Luzern, Switzerland[2]
- 2000 Town of Tbilisi, Georgia
- 1999 Town of Bethlehem, Palestine
- 1998 Sculpture-park Sárospatak, Hungary
- 1998 Galeria Murska Sobota, Slovenia
- 1998 City Museum of Skopje, Macedonia
- 1997 Municipal Galery of Budapest, Hungary
- 1997 Municipality of Hesperingen, Luxemburg
- 1997 Town of Letenye, Hungary
- 1996 Museum Würth, Künzelsau, Germany
- 1995 University of Salzburg, Austria
- 1995 Museum for foreign Art, Riga, Latvia
- 1994 Ernst Museum, Budapest, Hungary
- 1994 Achmatowa Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
- 1994 Museion Bozen, Bolzano, Italy
- 1994 Voest Alpine MCE, Linz, Austria
- 1992 Town of Veszprém, Hungary
- 1992 Lankó Dezsö Múzeum Veszprém, Hungary
- 1990 National Academy of Science, Washington D.C.
- 1985 Museum of the State of Tyrolya (Ferdinandeum) , Innsbruck, Austria
[edit] Awards
- 1991 Förderpreis für bildende Kunst und Architektur der Sudetendeutschen Landsmannschaft (annual award for Arts and architecture)
- 1995 Award of the Masaryk academy of Arts, Prague, Chech Republic
- 1996 Monument of the opening of the Iron Curtain, Sopron, Hungary
- 2000 Art Award of the European Art Union
- since 1994 she has designed the sculpture of "MediaNet-Award" at the Munich Film Festival
- since 1996 she has designed the sculpture of "VFF TV-Movie Award" at the Munich Film Festival
- since 1997 she has designed the sculpture of "High Hopes Award" at the Munich Film Festival
- since 1997 she has designed the sculpture of "CineMerit Award" at the Munich Film Festival[3]
- since 1998 she has designed the sculpture of "Deutscher Filmschulpreis" at the Munich Film Festival
On 26 May 2007 Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili granted Georgian citizenship to Gabriela.
[edit] Marriage and children
On 30 August 1978, in Pöcking, Bavaria, Gabriela was married civilly to Christian Meister, a German attorney. They renewed their vows in a religious ceremony 5 September 1978, in St. Odile. They divorced in 1997. They have three children:
- Severin Meister (born 9 January 1981)
- Lioba Meister (born 20 August 1983)
- Alena Meister (born 7 September 1986)
[edit] Ancestry
[edit] Literature
Gabriela von Habsburg.Sculpture (English version) By Prof. Mathias Frehner and Prof. Carla Schulz-Hofmann Bucher GmbH & Co. Druck Verlag Netzwerk; (22. Oktober 2007) ISBN 978-3-902612-31-1
Gabriela von Habsburg.Skulpturen (German version) ISBN 978-3-902612-20-5