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Rudolf Hausner
Hausner, Rudolf
(b. Vienna, 4 Dec 1914 - d. Vienna, 25 Feb 1995). Austrian painter,
draughtsman, printmaker and sculptor. He studied at the Akademie
der Bildenden Kunste in Vienna from 1931 until 1936. During
this period he also travelled to England, France, Italy, Greece,
Turkey and Egypt. After he was designated a 'degenerate' artist
in 1938, exhibition of his work was banned in Germany. He was a
soldier from 1941 until 1945. In 1942 he married Grete Czingely.
Before allying himself with and co-founding the Vienna School of
Fantastic Realism his works were mainly Expressionist-influenced
images of suburbs, still-lifes and female models, most of which
he destroyed.
In 1944 he marries Irene Schmied. During the last days of the war
he is assigned to an air defense unit. After the war he returns
to his bomb-damaged studio and resumes work as an artist. In 1946
he founds a surrealist group together with Edgar Jene, Ernst
Fuchs, Wolfgang Hutter and Fritz Janschka. They are later joined
by Arik Brauer and Anton Lehmden. He joins the Art-Club and had
his first one-man exhibition in the Konzerthaus, Vienna. A key work
of this period, It's me! (1948; Vienna, Hist. Mus.), shows his awareness
of Pittura Metafisica and Surrealism in a psychoanalytical painting
where the elongated being in the foreground penetrates what was
apparently a real landscape, until it tears like a backdrop; another
painting, Forum of Inward-turned Optics (1948; Vienna, Hist. Mus.),
is evidence of his ability to depict the subject in a realist style
while simultaneously overturning the laws of one-point perspective.
He marries Hermine Jedlicka in 195; their daughter Xenia Hausner,
also an artist, is born the same year. After working on the painting
for six years he completes his masterpiece The Ark of Odysseus in
1956. The Ark of Odysseus (1948-51 and 1953-6; Vienna, Hist. Mus.),
depicts the hero as a self-portrait and was a precursor to the series
of Adam paintings in which Hausner painted his own features.
In 1957 Hausner paints his first "Adam" picture. He comes
into conflict with the Surrealist orthodoxy, who condemn as heretical
his attempt to give equal importance to both conscious and unconscious
processes. In 1959 his co-founds the Vienna School of Fantastic
Realism together with Ernst Fuchs, Wolfgang Hutter, Anton Lehmden,
Arik Brauer, and Fritz Janschka. In 1962 Hausner met Paul Delvaux,
Rene Magritte, Victor Brauner and Dorothea Tanning while
travelling in Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and France. The
1st Burda Prize for Painting is awarded to him in 1967. In 1969
he is awarded the Prize of the City of Vienna; he separates from
Hermine Jedlicka and moves to Hietzing together with his daughter
Xenia and Anne Wolgast, who he had met in Hamburg in 1966, and is...
From 1966 until 1980 he was a guest professor at the Hochschule
fur Bildende Kunste in Hamburg. He also taught at the
Acad. of Fine Art, Vienna. Among his students are Joseph Bramer,
Friedrich Hechelmann, Gottfried Helnwein, Michael Engelhardt, and
Siegried Goldberger. Hausner was awarded the Austrian State Prize
for Painting in 1970.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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