Józef Simmler

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Portrait of Józef Simmler and his brothers
Death of Barbara Radziwillowna by Józef Simmler.
Józef Simmler (March 14, 1823, Warsaw – March 1, 1868, Warsaw) was a Polish painter known for his classical style and his Polish subjects.

Simmler came from a wealthy German Evangelical family. It was this affluent upbringing that allowed him to pursue his interest in cities like Dresden, Munich and Paris.[1]

Perhaps his most famous work is "Death of Barbara Radziwillowna" ("Śmierć Barbary Radziwiłłówny"), an oil on canvas work completed in 1860. The painting gained immense popularity when the Warsaw-based Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts, a newly formed institution with the goal of encourage and promote domestic art and artists, put it on exhibit in 1861.[2] It now hangs in the National Museum, Warsaw. His other famous paintings are “Children of King Edward” (1847) and “Portrait of a Nobleman with a Parrot” (1859).[1]

Józef Simmler's major contribution to Polish art is the humaneness that his paintings evoked. He was a specially gifted portraitist. Using styles of costume paintings prevalent in France, he produced works that allowed the public a view of the past. His paintings, however, were more than just reproductions of history. The masterful works also gave a deep sense of compassion, dread, and tenderness.[2]

His daughter's brother-in-law was Eduard Strasburger, the famous Polish-German botanist. One of Simmler's grandsons was Henryk Leon Strasburger, a Polish delegate to the League of Nations.

Józef Simmler's portrait of his sister, Katarzyna Jahn.
Simmler's painting showing Catherine Jagiellon and her son Sigismund in Gripsholm prison.
Portrait of Jadwiga Łuszczewska (1855)
Portrait of a Nobleman with a Parrot(1859)
Portrait of Kronenberg sisters

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Joseph Simmler". Retrieved 17 January 2014. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Jozef Simmler". Retrieved 23 October 2013. 

External links


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