Karel Vítězslav Mašek
Karel Vítězslav Mašek (1 September 1865, Prague - 24 July 1927, Prague) was a Czech painter, architect, illustrator and art professor.
Life
He studied briefly at the Academy of Fine Arts, Prague with Antonín Lhota[1] then, in 1884, transferred to the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich where he was a member of "Škréta" (Orcs), a Czech young artists' association, and studied with Alexander von Wagner.
In 1887, he accompanied Alfons Mucha and František Dvořák to Paris, studying at the Académie Julian with Gustave Boulanger and Jules Lefebvre. It was there that he became acquainted with pointilism.[1] he returned to Prague in 1888 and two years later joined the "Krasoumné jednoty", or "Kunstverein für Böhmen" (Fine Arts Unit), an association which included many members of the Czech nobility who were devoted to the promotion of art.
From 1898, he was a Professor at the Academy of Arts, Architecture and Design in Prague.[1] Josef Čapek is, perhaps, his best-known student. He was also interested in architecture and designed his own villa in 1901. In his later years, he was involved in engineering issues related to the growth of Prague and its agglomeration with neighboring towns.
References
Further reading
- Karolína Fabelová, Karel Vítězslav Mašek, Eminent - Patrik Šimon (2002) ISBN 978-80-902-5684-2
- Marie Rakušanová, Bytosti odnikud : metamorfózy akademických principů v malbě první poloviny 20. století v Čechách (Beings from Nowhere: the Metamorphosis of Academic Principles in the Painting of the First Half of the 20th Century in Bohemia), Academia (2008) ISBN 978-80-200-1648-5
- Jiří Valenta, Malované opony divadel českých zemí (Painted Theater Curtains, including those by Mašek), NIPOS (2010), ISBN 978-80-7068-238-8
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karel Vítězslav Mašek. |
- ArtNet: More works by Mašek
- AAAD website, Prague: Chronology and critical analysis of Mašek
- List of Works relating to Mašek in the National Library of the Czech Republic
- Informační systém abART: Mašek Karel Vítězslav