MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Austrian Painter, 1724-1796
Austrian painter. His work as a painter of both oil paintings and frescoes on religious, mythological and occasionally worldly themes spanned the second half of the 18th century, adapting a Late Baroque training to the onset of Neo-classicism but remaining strikingly individual throughout. His fresco work, mostly still in situ in widespread central European locations, came at the end of an artistic tradition and was for long neglected, being far from major cultural centres; but it is now seen to establish him as one of the leading painters of his century
MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Adoration of the Virgin mk86
1757
Heiligenkreuz-Guttenbrunn,Orgelchor
Mary Magdalene 1754 Oil on canvas Cistertian Church, Zirc The picture shows the influence Piazzetta's painting. Artist: MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Painting Title: Mary Magdalen , 1751-1800 Painting Style: Austrian , , religious Painting ID:: 63081
MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Mary Magdalene 1754 Oil on canvas Cistertian Church, Zirc The picture shows the influence Piazzetta's painting. Artist: MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Painting Title: Mary Magdalen , 1751-1800 Painting Style: Austrian , , religious
The Trinity - Oil on canvas 62,5 x 33 cm Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest It was as a master of fresco-painting and as a most prolific decorator of churches and palaces in Austria, Czechoslovakia and Hungary that Franz Anton Maulbertsch was most appreciated by his contemporaries. Perhaps nowadays greater value is placed on his surviving bozzetti - sketches painted in gloriously fresh colours with brilliant technique. His late works, such as The Holy Trinity, a sketch for an altar-piece, are fluid in their handling, and the light colours give a silvery effect. In these sketches Maulbertsch captured his subjects with a few unbelievably light strokes of the brush and some spots of colour permeated with light. When he elaborated these sketches in their final form, however, particularly in the case of the later altarpieces, the spontaneity was often lost, the forms becoming heavier and the hues muted. This sketch from the late period of the artist was identified as a study for the altarpiece in the Parish Church in Wien-Reindorf. Artist: MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Painting Title: The Trinity , 1751-1800 Painting Style: Austrian , , religious Painting ID:: 63083
MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton The Trinity - Oil on canvas 62,5 x 33 cm Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest It was as a master of fresco-painting and as a most prolific decorator of churches and palaces in Austria, Czechoslovakia and Hungary that Franz Anton Maulbertsch was most appreciated by his contemporaries. Perhaps nowadays greater value is placed on his surviving bozzetti - sketches painted in gloriously fresh colours with brilliant technique. His late works, such as The Holy Trinity, a sketch for an altar-piece, are fluid in their handling, and the light colours give a silvery effect. In these sketches Maulbertsch captured his subjects with a few unbelievably light strokes of the brush and some spots of colour permeated with light. When he elaborated these sketches in their final form, however, particularly in the case of the later altarpieces, the spontaneity was often lost, the forms becoming heavier and the hues muted. This sketch from the late period of the artist was identified as a study for the altarpiece in the Parish Church in Wien-Reindorf. Artist: MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Painting Title: The Trinity , 1751-1800 Painting Style: Austrian , , religious
Decoration of the Cupola 1783 Fresco Parish Church, P?pa Artist:MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Title: Decoration of the Cupola, 1751-1800, Austrian , painting , religious Painting ID:: 64403
MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Decoration of the Cupola 1783 Fresco Parish Church, P?pa Artist:MAULBERTSCH, Franz Anton Title: Decoration of the Cupola, 1751-1800, Austrian , painting , religious
Austrian Painter, 1724-1796
Austrian painter. His work as a painter of both oil paintings and frescoes on religious, mythological and occasionally worldly themes spanned the second half of the 18th century, adapting a Late Baroque training to the onset of Neo-classicism but remaining strikingly individual throughout. His fresco work, mostly still in situ in widespread central European locations, came at the end of an artistic tradition and was for long neglected, being far from major cultural centres; but it is now seen to establish him as one of the leading painters of his century