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Abramowicz was born into a Jewish family in [[Bukovina]] in the [[Austro hungarian monarchy|Austro-Hungarian Monarch]]<nowiki/>y. His father worked as a butcher. His brother was Serge Abranovic (stage name; died 1942 in Warsaw), celebrated as the "Caruso of operetta". Abramowicz studied painting at the [[Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna]] and from 1912 to 1914 at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich under [[Karl Raupp]] and [[Ludwig von Herterich|Ludwig von Herteric]]<nowiki/>h.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Matrikeldatenbank - Akademie der Bildenden Künste München |url=https://matrikel.adbk.de//matrikel/mb_1884-1920/jahr_1912/matrikel-05172 |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=matrikel.adbk.de}}</ref>
Abramowicz was born into a Jewish family in [[Bukovina]] in the [[Austro hungarian monarchy|Austro-Hungarian Monarch]]<nowiki/>y. His father worked as a butcher. His brother was Serge Abranovic (stage name; died 1942 in Warsaw), celebrated as the "Caruso of operetta". Abramowicz studied painting at the [[Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna]] and from 1912 to 1914 at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich under [[Karl Raupp]] and [[Ludwig von Herterich|Ludwig von Herteric]]<nowiki/>h.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Matrikeldatenbank - Akademie der Bildenden Künste München |url=https://matrikel.adbk.de//matrikel/mb_1884-1920/jahr_1912/matrikel-05172 |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=matrikel.adbk.de}}</ref>


After taking part in the First World War as a soldier in the Austrian army, Abramowicz lived in Switzerland and France and, from the 1920s, in Vienna, where he worked as a freelance painter. From 1933 to 1935, he studied at the Vienna Academy under Karl Sterrer. He then settled in Vienna as a freelance painter and graphic artist. He was soon successful and received commissions from the USA, especially for portraits. This enabled him to rent a studio in Vienna's Prinz-Eugen-Straße and buy an apartment for himself and his wife Maria, née Prenosyl (* 1907), at Schottenbastei 16 in Vienna's city center. After the annexation of Austria to National Socialist Germany in March 1938 and the beginning of the persecution of Jews, he and his wife were in acute danger. Abramowicz fled to France on May 24, 1938, and his wife followed him in January 1939.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Abramowicz, Leon {{!}} Proveana |url=https://www.proveana.de/de/person/abramowicz-leon |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=www.proveana.de}}</ref> Their apartment and its entire contents were confiscated in 1938. The inventory of the apartment and studio, including the entire artistic oeuvre since 1918, an estimated 600 oil paintings and 7,000 works on paper, copies after old masters, magnificent original costumes that Abramowicz had used for his works, a small collection of paintings by modern painters and several projection and photographic cameras were confiscated and forcibly sold.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lillie |first=Sophie |title=Was einmal war: Handbuch der enteigneten Kunstsammlungen Wiens |date=2003 |publisher=Czernin Verl |isbn=978-3-7076-0049-0 |series=Die Bibliothek des Raubes |location=Wien}}</ref> Their whereabouts are unknown.<ref name=":0" />
After taking part in the First World War as a soldier in the Austrian army, Abramowicz lived in Switzerland and France and, from the 1920s, in Vienna, where he worked as a freelance painter. From 1933 to 1935, he studied at the Vienna Academy under Karl Sterrer. He then settled in Vienna as a freelance painter and graphic artist. He was soon successful and received commissions from the USA, especially for portraits. This enabled him to rent a studio in Vienna's Prinz-Eugen-Straße and buy an apartment for himself and his wife Maria, née Prenosyl (* 1907), at Schottenbastei 16 in Vienna's city center. After the annexation of Austria to National Socialist Germany in March 1938 and the beginning of the persecution of Jews, he and his wife were in acute danger. Abramowicz fled to France on May 24, 1938, and his wife followed him in January 1939.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Abramowicz, Leon {{!}} Proveana |url=https://www.proveana.de/de/person/abramowicz-leon |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=www.proveana.de}}</ref> Their apartment and its entire contents were confiscated in 1938. The inventory of the apartment and studio, including the entire artistic oeuvre since 1918, an estimated 600 oil paintings and 7,000 works on paper, copies after old masters, magnificent original costumes that Abramowicz had used for his works, a small collection of paintings by modern painters and several projection and photographic cameras were confiscated and forcibly sold.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lillie |first=Sophie |title=Was einmal war: Handbuch der enteigneten Kunstsammlungen Wiens |date=2003 |publisher=Czernin Verl |isbn=978-3-7076-0049-0 |series=Die Bibliothek des Raubes |location=Wien}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite web |title=Lost Art Internet Database - Provenienzforschung zur NS-Raubkunst - Abramowicz, Leon |url=http://web.archive.org/web/20150811214616/http://www.lostart.de/Content/051_ProvenienzRaubkunst/DE/Sammler/A/Abramowicz,%20Leon.html |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=web.archive.org |language=de}}</ref>Their whereabouts are unknown.<ref name=":0" />


After fleeing, the couple first came to [[Nice]]. Abramowicz became friends with the painter [[Pierre Bonnard]], who had a strong artistic influence on him. In 1940, Abramowicz and his wife were taken separately to internment camps. However, with the permission of the prefecture of Grenoble, they were given a refugee apartment as victims of the Nazis.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Abramowicz, Leon |url=https://www.porta-polonica.de/en/lexicon/abramowicz-leon |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=www.porta-polonica.de |language=en}}</ref> In July 1943, the wife was captured by the Nazis and taken to the Gurs concentration camp. Abramowicz was arrested during a raid in August 1943 and sent to a camp in Toulouse. He and his wife managed to escape and lived underground with the help of a Jewish refugee committee until the liberation of the country.<ref name=":1" />
After fleeing, the couple first came to [[Nice]]. Abramowicz became friends with the painter [[Pierre Bonnard]], who had a strong artistic influence on him. In 1940, Abramowicz and his wife were taken separately to internment camps. However, with the permission of the prefecture of Grenoble, they were given a refugee apartment as victims of the Nazis.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=Abramowicz, Leon |url=https://www.porta-polonica.de/en/lexicon/abramowicz-leon |access-date=2023-12-09 |website=www.porta-polonica.de |language=en}}</ref> In July 1943, the wife was captured by the Nazis and taken to the Gurs concentration camp. Abramowicz was arrested during a raid in August 1943 and sent to a camp in Toulouse. He and his wife managed to escape and lived underground with the help of a Jewish refugee committee until the liberation of the country.<ref name=":1" />

Revision as of 07:15, 9 December 2023

Leon Abramowicz (born March 18, 1889 in Czernowitz; died February 15, 1978 in Vienna) was a Jewish Austrian painter who emigrated from Nazi Austria.

Life and Work

Abramowicz was born into a Jewish family in Bukovina in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. His father worked as a butcher. His brother was Serge Abranovic (stage name; died 1942 in Warsaw), celebrated as the "Caruso of operetta". Abramowicz studied painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and from 1912 to 1914 at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich under Karl Raupp and Ludwig von Herterich.[1]

After taking part in the First World War as a soldier in the Austrian army, Abramowicz lived in Switzerland and France and, from the 1920s, in Vienna, where he worked as a freelance painter. From 1933 to 1935, he studied at the Vienna Academy under Karl Sterrer. He then settled in Vienna as a freelance painter and graphic artist. He was soon successful and received commissions from the USA, especially for portraits. This enabled him to rent a studio in Vienna's Prinz-Eugen-Straße and buy an apartment for himself and his wife Maria, née Prenosyl (* 1907), at Schottenbastei 16 in Vienna's city center. After the annexation of Austria to National Socialist Germany in March 1938 and the beginning of the persecution of Jews, he and his wife were in acute danger. Abramowicz fled to France on May 24, 1938, and his wife followed him in January 1939.[2] Their apartment and its entire contents were confiscated in 1938. The inventory of the apartment and studio, including the entire artistic oeuvre since 1918, an estimated 600 oil paintings and 7,000 works on paper, copies after old masters, magnificent original costumes that Abramowicz had used for his works, a small collection of paintings by modern painters and several projection and photographic cameras were confiscated and forcibly sold.[3] [4]Their whereabouts are unknown.[2]

After fleeing, the couple first came to Nice. Abramowicz became friends with the painter Pierre Bonnard, who had a strong artistic influence on him. In 1940, Abramowicz and his wife were taken separately to internment camps. However, with the permission of the prefecture of Grenoble, they were given a refugee apartment as victims of the Nazis.[5] In July 1943, the wife was captured by the Nazis and taken to the Gurs concentration camp. Abramowicz was arrested during a raid in August 1943 and sent to a camp in Toulouse. He and his wife managed to escape and lived underground with the help of a Jewish refugee committee until the liberation of the country.[5]

Abramowicz then worked as a freelance painter in Paris. In 1950, he and his wife returned to Vienna, where they lived in seclusion and Abramowicz worked as a painter. Until 1957, he studied again as a guest student in the painting master classes of Josef Dobrowsky and Robin Christian Andersen at the Vienna Academy of Arts.

Stylistically influenced by Bonnard, Paul Cézanne, Oskar Kokoschka and Anton Faistauer, Abramowitz mainly painted still lifes, portraits and landscapes.

Selected works

  • Stillleben mit Rosen und Apfel (Öl auf Pappe, 45 × 55 cm, 1922; Museum Kunst der Verlorenen Generation, Salzburg)[6]
  • Porträt Maria Abramowicz (Öl auf Karton, 381 × 47,3 cm, um 1948)[7]
  • Selbstporträt (Öl auf Leinwand, 100 × 65 cm)
  • Blumenstillleben (Öl auf Leinwand, 80 × 60 cm; um 1935/1938)[8]
  • Das Künstlerehepaar Abramowicz (Öl auf Leinwand, 63 × 46 cm)
  • Blumenstillleben (Öl auf Leinwand, 62,2 × 42,5 cm)[9]

Literature

  • Karl Heinz Ritschel: Leon Abramowicz. 1889–1978. Ein Maler aus der „verschollenen Generation“. Winter Verlag, Salzburg, 1980
  • Sophie Lillie: Was einmal war. Handbuch der enteigneten Kunstsammlungen Wiens. Czernin Verlag, Wien, 2003, S. 29/39

References

  1. ^ "Matrikeldatenbank - Akademie der Bildenden Künste München". matrikel.adbk.de. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  2. ^ a b "Abramowicz, Leon | Proveana". www.proveana.de. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  3. ^ Lillie, Sophie (2003). Was einmal war: Handbuch der enteigneten Kunstsammlungen Wiens. Die Bibliothek des Raubes. Wien: Czernin Verl. ISBN 978-3-7076-0049-0.
  4. ^ "Lost Art Internet Database - Provenienzforschung zur NS-Raubkunst - Abramowicz, Leon". web.archive.org (in German). Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  5. ^ a b "Abramowicz, Leon". www.porta-polonica.de. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  6. ^ "Abramowicz, Leon". Museum Kunst der Verlorenen Generation (in Austrian German). Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  7. ^ "Abramowicz, Leon" (in German). porta-polonica.de. Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  8. ^ "Leo Abramowicz (1889-1978) – Stillleben – Öl/Leinw.signiert – Kunsthandel proarte" (in German). Retrieved 2022-01-19.
  9. ^ "Bonhams : Leon Abramowicz (Czechoslovakian, 1889-1978) Still life of flowers". Retrieved 2022-01-19.

[[Category:Men]] [[Category:1978 deaths]] [[Category:1889 births]] [[Category:Austrian people]]