Kršnjavi, Quiquerez, Mašić – Dawn Impressions
							Zagreb’s Modern Gallery is commemorating the 85th anniversary of the death of Croatian painter and art historian, Isidor Kršnjavi, with the exhibition titled “Kršnjavi, Quiquerez, Mašić – Dawn Impressions”. From November 21st until December 9th audiences can appreciate a symbiosis of works by the three artists which clearly demonstrates that Croatian painting was well on its way towards impressionism.
							
Aficionados of the persona and opus of Isidor  Kršnjavi will be excited to hear that  Zagreb’s Modern Gallery is commemorating the 85th anniversary of the  death of the great Croatian painter and art historian with an exhibition titled  “Kršnjavi, Quiquerez, Mašić – Dawn Impressions”, which will  be open to the public between November 21st  and December 9th.
The exhibition was the ideal opportunity to showcase some of the numerous  works by the three aforementioned artists, which are part of the museum’s holdings.  The works of all three artists herald the beginning of impressionism in  Croatian painting of the 19th century.
Isidor Kršnjavi (1845-1927) was a famous Croatian painter, art historian  and politician. His first contact with art was in Osijek, from where he went to  Vienna to study history and art history. He continued studying painting at the  Munich Academy before moving to Italy where he continued his studies and became  quite proficient at copying the old masters.
Apart from being  known for his prolific career as a painter, Isidor Kršnjavi is also remembered  as a great activist in the area of the development of art in Croatia. He was an  art history and archaeology professor at Zagreb University and the first head  of Strossmayer’s Gallery of Old Masters. In cooperation with Herman Bolle, he  founded the Crafts School (the School for Applied Arts and Design) and the  Crafts Museum (Museum of Arts and Crafts). He also exerted a great deal of  influence on the development of the city as he helped build many hospitals,  libraries and schools. He was an active politician and he also translated books  and wrote poetry.
Ferdo Quiquerez  was born in Buda in 1845, and he was educated in Zagreb by the painter Muecke.  At that time, in 1869, he painted his most notable work – Coming of the Croats  at the Shores of the Adriatic Sea, which gained him a scholarship and enabled  him to continue his education in Munich. After being educated in Germany and  later Italy, he moved to Montenegro where he followed the local military in  battles against the Turks as a war painter. After the ‘war phase’ he turned to  landscape, cityscape, portrait and self-portrait painting, which became his  best works.
The last of the  three artists, Nikola Mašić (1852-1902), was also educated in Munich, as well  as Vienna and Paris, while he gained most of his practical experience  travelling around Italy. Upon his return to Zagreb, he became a professor of  drawing, and later on also the head of the Strossmayer Gallery. His paintings  are largely characterized by idyllic academism without much dabbing in  abstraction or more modern painting styles (predecessors of impression), and  his main motifs are idyllic rural studies of the Sava River Valley, as well as  studies of ordinary people, predominantly the locals of Lika and Posavina.
The Modern Gallery’s holdings comprise many  works by these artists – more than a hundred by Isidor Kršnjavi, 110 by Nikola  Mašić, and about ten by Ferdo Quiquerez, but a selection of only forty of the  most relevant works has been chosen for this exhibition. It consists mostly of  landscapes and portraits by Isidor Kršnjavi, the Sava River Basin landscapes by  Mašić, and small-scale landscapes by Ferdo Quiquerez.
							
															
							Published: 03.12.2012