Marie Egner
Marie Egner (25 August 1850, Bad Radkersburg - 31 March 1940, Vienna) was an Austrian painter.
Life
She took her first drawing lessons in Graz with Hermann von Königsbrunn,[1] then went to Düsseldorf from 1872 to 1875, where she studied with Carl Jungheim (1830-1886). In 1882, she went to Vienna to live with her mother, but spent her summers at the art colony in Plankenberg Castle, near Neulengbach, where she took lessons with Emil Jakob Schindler until 1887. A study trip to England followed from 1887 to 1889. Shortly after, her first exhibition was held at the Vienna Künstlerhaus.[1] She also exhibited in Germany and England.
She established an art school for women, but had to give it up in 1910, for health reasons. After World War I, she became a member of the Austrian Association of Women Artists (VBKÖ). In 1926, the group held a major retrospective exhibition of her work. After 1930, she began to lose her eyesight and withdrew from public life.[1]
References
Further reading
- Werner Fenz: Marie Egner 1850-1940. Landschaften, Blumenbilder. Exhibition catalog. Graz: Neue Galerie, 1979
- Martin Suppan: Marie Egner. Eine österreichische Stimmungsimpressionistin. 2 Vols. Vienna: Galerie Suppan, 1981-93 (with diaries and memoirs) ISBN 978-3-901255-08-3
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marie Egner. |
- Arcadja Auctions: More works by Egner
- Literature by and about Marie Egner in the German National Library catalogue
- Marie Egner Frauen in Bewegung @ Österreichische Nationalbibliothek
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