Ferenc Joachim

Ferenc Joachim

Ferenc Joachim, self portrait, oil on canvas, 49 cm x 63 cm, 1958, Budapest, Hungary.
Born 21 May 1882
Szeged, Austria-Hungary
Died 16 September 1964 (aged 82)
Gyula, People's Republic of Hungary
Nationality Hungarian
Education Budapest, Vienna, Munich and Paris
Known for Painting
Movement Impressionism

Ferenc Joachim (May 21, 1882 - September 16, 1964) was a Hungarian (Magyar) painter of portraits and landscapes in oil, watercolors and pastels on canvas, board and paper. He studied and painted in Budapest and Western Europe. Hungarian usage puts the surname before the given name, in the form Joachim Ferenc. As an untitled member of the minor nobility, Joachim was entitled to bear the honorary prefix Csejtei, so prior to the Communist abolition of honorifics in 1947 his name might be found in the form "Csejtei Joachim Ferenc" (or "Cs. Joachim F.") in Hungarian, or in German "Franz Joachim von Csejthey".

Early life

Ferenc Joachim and his wife Margit with their three children. Szeged, Hungary, 1925.

Joachim's parents were Ferenc Joachim and Emilia Metz of Szeged, Hungary. He had two brothers, Jozsef and Károly, and four sisters, Gizella, Mariska, Jolán, and Mici. The family was Roman Catholic. Some of his siblings were also artists in their own right: Jozsef was a sculptor and painter while Gizella became a stage actress.

Ferenc Joachim was born in Szeged, in what was at that time the Austro-Hungarian Empire. For the first 36 years of his life he lived and worked in Hungary and in various parts of Western Europe.

Little is known about the first 30 years of Joachim's life. It appears that Joachim was married twice. He married Margit Gráf (1892–1965) around 1912. They had three children: one daughter, Piroska (1913–2007), and two sons, Ferenc Gabriel (1920–1989) and Attila (1923–1947).[1]

Joachim studied painting in Budapest (Hungary), Vienna (Austria), Munich (Germany), and Paris (France).[2] He studied with Hungarian art educator Simon Hollósy at his private school in Munich,[3] and periodically visited Hollósy's Nagybánya Artists Colony in Transylvania.

Painting career

Joachim circa 1929, in Szeged, Hungary.

While his principal residences and studios were in his birthplace of Szeged and in Budapest, Joachim also painted in Rome, Venice, Marseilles, and the south of France. During his time in France he went by the name François Joachim. His works were exhibited in Paris, Rome, Venice, Berlin and Munich.[4]

Joachim was a proponent of the late 19th-century concept of leaving the studio and painting in nature. One of his most productive periods was during one of his stays in Marseilles and along the Mediterranean coast, where he painted over a hundred canvases.

In Szeged he was active in promoting the arts in the region. Articles from Művészet in both 1910[5] and 1913[6] show him with other local artists. A publication from Hódmezővásárhely dated 15 April 1910 reports the annual spring exhibition of artists in Szeged, with Joachim Ferenc cited as the most modern of them, with a first-class sensibility for colors. Another article documents that in April 1919 Joachim was a member of the committee of the Szeged Museum trying to save and catalogue the museum's collections following the ravages and chaos of World War I[7] (during which Joachim had served in the Kaiserlich und königlich forces of the Austro-Hungarian Army). Another document, dated January 15, 1928, shows Ferenc Joachim to be a founding member of the "Alföld Artists Association" ("Alföldi Müvészek Egyesülete") in Szeged.[8]

Joachim's paintings were exhibited at the Salon de Paris, the Nemzeti Szalon (National Salon) in Budapest, and the Szépműveszeti Múzeum or Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest).

Today a small collection of his paintings (partly owned and partly on loan) is preserved in the repository of the "Móra Ferenc Múzeum" in Szeged. One painting, "Kőbánya Albániában" (Stone Quarry in Albania), is owned by the Hungarian National Gallery.[9] All other paintings are in private hands, occasionally appearing at public art auctions in Hungary and the US.

Family difficulties

Portrait of Julia Graf. Oil on canvas, 60 cm x 80 cm, 1938.

During the years of the Great Depression the family was reduced to poverty; in an interview in 1935 Joachim attributed his daughter's attempted suicide to their financial straits.[10]

During the Second World War a number of Joachim's relatives and in-laws were persecuted or murdered. Both of his sisters-in-law (one of whom, Julia Gráf, had sat for a portrait with him in 1938), their husbands and children died in the Budapest Holocaust, while the fate of his three brothers-in-law is unknown. Joachim's younger son, Attila, enrolled as a student at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts in 1941, and graduated in 1946.[11] His early death, the year after his graduation, was attributed to complications arising from internal injuries received from beatings by Hungarian Fascists and German Nazis, during the Budapest holocaust.

Later life

The final 20 years of Joachim's life, from 1944 to 1964, were spent in Communist Hungary.[12] His two surviving children, Piroska and Ferenc Gabriel, fled the country after the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, and found refuge in Canada, both later moving to the United States. Ferenc Gabriel, under the name Frank G. Joachim, became a research biologist and entomologist with the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Metabolism and Radiation Laboratory.

In their old age, Joachim and his wife were moved to separate old age homes: Joachim went to Gyula, where he died and was buried on September 16, 1964, at age 82; Margit went to Szentgotthárd, where she died and was buried at age 73 in 1965.

References

  1. Photographs of Piroska, Ferenc Gabriel, and Attila are available on Wikimedia Commons. Accessed 8 January 2008.
  2. Éber László, Művészeti Lexikon – Épitészet, Szobrászat, Festészet, Iparművészet, vol. 1. Budapest: Gyözö Andor, 1935, p. 513 (Scan uploaded to Wikipedia 10 July 2006; accessed 6 January 2008); Hans Vollmer, Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler des XX. Jahrhunderts (Leipzig, 1953), vol. 2, p. 551.
  3. visuart.hu. Accessed 6 January 2008.
  4. An article in the theatrical newspaper Szinhazi Ujsag reviewing a solo exhibition of Joachim's paintings in Budapest, in 1925, states that Joachim's work had been well-received in Paris, Rome, Munich and Venice, and that this particular exhibition had already received favourable notices in other Budapest newspapers, Pesti Hirlap and 8 Orai Ujsag, and in the Vienna newspapers Die Stunde and Neue Freie Presse. A scan of the review was uploaded to Wikipedia on 16 July 2006. Accessed 8 January 2008.
  5. Transcription at www.mke.hu. Accessed 6 January 2008.
  6. Transcription at www.mke.hu. Accessed 6 January 2008.
  7. Lengyel András, “A Forradalmak “Furcsa Párosa”. Móra Ferenc és Zadravetz István”, Holmi, June 2004, p. 676. holmi.org Archived online (pdf). Retrieved 6 January 2008.
  8. bibl.u-szeged.hu - pdf file
  9. visuart.hu, accessed 9 January 2008.
  10. Esti Kurir, March 15, 1935, p. 9. Scan uploaded to Wikipedia 10 July 2006. Accessed 6 January 2008.
  11. Student records. Retrieved 6 January 2008.
  12. Private communication from Mrs. Piroska Porkoláb, Joachim's daughter, aged 92, in conversations during July, August, September, October and November 2005: "He had a voracious intellectual curiosity which he fed incessantly by avid reading of literature, history, science, newspapers. He had many friends and acquaintances amongst his contemporaries and colleagues in the arts including painters, sculptors, writers, and musicians. He had never renounced anyone for any reasons. He had always protected anyone seeking his assistance. The last twenty-five years of his life, from the onset of World War II to his death, he lived under extreme adversity and hardships due to the German Nazi and then Russian communist occupations causing deprivations of basic human rights, human dignity, jobs, income, livelihood, artistic supplies and materials, artistic integrity."
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