Untitled (1960-as évek)

Vera Trőster (1942 - )

Information

Size

43 x 24 cm

Material

Aquarelle on paper.

Price

2,000 USD

Signature

Not signed

About

Vera Trőster originally wanted to study painting at the College of Fine Arts, but her application was rejected time and time again (presumably for political reasons), so she ended up studying ceramics at the School of Applied Arts. Little is known about her life, but it is certain that she and her friends were constantly roaming the countryside and villages in search of old relics and folk art objects that were not properly valued or recognised. She also painted abstract pictures as early as the 1960s. In 1970, Iván Dévényi wrote in the Vigilia newspaper, 'The painter paints her non-figurative works with broad, fierce brushstrokes and passionate colouring reminiscent of Rouault, Kokoschka, Béla Czóbel and Hungarian folk art (Psalter, Variations in Pink, etc.). Vera's pictorialism is not broad, but experienced, sincere and unconcerned with artistic fashions. We look forward to her journey with confidence'. The exhibition was opened by Margit Anna at the House of Technology in Esztergom. The following year, Trőster was displayed at the Csepel Gallery, where Éva Körner gave a speech at the opening. In 1972, at about the same time as many other Hungarian avant-garde artists, Trőster left Hungary and emigrated to Switzerland. To put part of her vast and extremely valuable collection of folk art in safe and capable hands, she donated it to the art collector Ernő Kolozsváry. Her abstract works still produced in Hungary are in prestigious collections. 

 

The introduction to the catalogue of the Csepel exhibition classifies Trőster's paintings as subjective visionary painting, and highlights in particular her "colour orgies", to which the forms are completely subordinated. Indeed, the untitled watercolour now on view also shows a kinship with lyrical abstraction, which makes the decorative rhythm and balance of colours the principle that shapes the image. In Hungary, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, the Zugló Circle (Sándor Molnár, László Molnár, Imre Bak, István Nádler, Endre Hortobágyi, Pál Deim) was influenced by the so-called motif-hiding abstraction. However, Dévényi's insight is also pin-pointed with Roualt, Kokoschka or Czóbel, if we refer to the thick contours separating the forms.

Related Themes

Women Artists

(1880 - 1980)

Post-War Abstraction

(1948 - 1980)

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