Gitta Gyenes

1880 - 1960

Biography

Gyitta Gyenes was born in Budapest and started painting with Bertalan Karlovszky in 1906. He later studied in Baia Mare, Vienna and Rome. From 1910 he exhibited in several places: he participated in the exhibitions of the Kálmán Könyves Salon, the House of Artists and the National Salon. In 1915, he participated in the World's Fair in San Francisco, where he received a silver medal.

 

In the twenties, as the suitor of his daughter, he met Attila József, whose portrait he painted. In 1928 he became a member of the KUT (New Society of Fine Artists), the most advanced fine arts association of the period, in which he exhibited with Róbert Berény, Dezső Czigány and István Szőnyi, among others. In 1937, the Tamás Gallery organized an exhibition for him. He was a member of the OMIKE (National Hungarian Israelite Public Cultural Association), in which he took part in all its exhibitions between 1939 and 1944.

 

In 1941 he was admitted to the National Association of Hungarian Artists. Prior to the occupation, he held his last exhibition in May 1943 at the Kossuth Lajos Street Salon in the Studio, where he presented forty new tempera paintings. After the German occupation in 1944, hiding and forced labor awaited him and his family. It was during this time that he made his famous Antifascist series. More than ten years after his death, in 1978, the National Gallery organized an exhibition of his works.

Related artworks

Purple Castle (1910)

Gitta Gyenes

19,000,000 HUF

Potrait of a man (1930)

Gitta Gyenes

1,520,000 HUF

Sunbathing Women (1930 körül)

Gitta Gyenes

380,000 HUF

The park of the Esterházy Castle in Fertőd (Around 1912)

Gitta Gyenes

6,840,000 HUF

Please don't hurt me! (1944)

Gitta Gyenes

2,280,000 HUF

Portrait of a girl (Around 1920)

Gitta Gyenes

2,280,000 HUF