Rococo Prince in Blue (Around 1912)

Lajos Gulácsy (1882 - 1932)

Information

Size

19 x 9 cm

Material

Aquarelle, pencil on paper.

Price

15,000 USD

Signature

Signed bottom right: Gulácsy, Signed bottom left: Verona

Bibliography

Reproduced: Gulácsy Lajos: Pauline Holseel. Ferenczy Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1994.

Exhibited

Lajos Gulácsy Memorial Exhibition

2006. május 26 -július 2.

Rippl-Rónai Múzeum

Kaposvár

About

Gulácsy felt himself a stranger in the world of the 20th century, he despised technical civilization, and was repelled by the utilitarian outlook of the modern age. Whenever he could, he travelled to Italy; he liked to wander around Verona, Padua, Siena and other ancient Italian cities. Ignoring the wondering glances of passers-by and the taunts of street children, he wandered the narrow alleys day and night in Renaissance costume.

 

At the turn of the 1910s, Gulácsy dedicated an entire period to the French Rococo: a whole series of fragile figures evoke Watteau's airily light, yet theatrically refined gallant scenes. The sweet, artful chivalry of the Rococo is transcribed as a playful, childlike, yet strange, irrational and visionary vision. The caricature-like movements of the figures in the empty space make them participants in a marionette. Gradually, the rococo play is interwoven with a quest to reveal the dark side of the soul and a tragic sense of life. The idea of passing and the mythical evocation of death are transformed into visions of gloom and expressive artistic power.

Related Themes

Pre-War Figurative Art

(1922 - 1950)

Art Nouveau

(1901 - 1921)

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