website content

In pre-evening moment. Gypsies (Pre-evening moment, Black Ram, Gypsies)

Part of the collection: European classics of modernity

Popularization note

Between 1898 and 1899, Fryderyk Pautsch studied law at the Jan Kazimierz University in Lwów, and then at the Jagiellonian University. The following year he chose to study art under Józef Unierzyński and Leon Wyczółkowski at Kraków's Academy of Fine Arts. At the turn of 1905/1906, he stayed on a scholarship in Paris, where he enrolled in the studio of Jean-Paul Laurens at the Académie Julian. He graduated from his alma mater in 1906 and settled in Lviv. From there, the closest place he had was Pokucie, where since his student days he, together with Władysław Jarocki and Kazimierz Sichulski, observed the Hutsul region - the landscape and life of the Ruthenian-Volossian highlanders. The folk themes taken directly from their folklore contributed to the fact that all three artists were called Hutsuls. The tendency towards Art Nouveau decorativeness was evident in the Szczecin collection's Ofiara wieczorna [Evening Offering]. The composition, also exhibited under the titles W przedwieczorną chwilę [In an Early Evening Moment], Huculi [Hutsuls], Cyganie [Gypsies] or Czarny baran [The Black Ram], gathers figures crowded into a tight frame, compared by critics to ancient Greek heroes: The landscape has become metaphorical. The entire dithyrambic mood of these paintings is concentrated in this bizarre group, where under a golden frieze of sunflowers there is a girl, a Slavic Vestalca, covered with a rich shawl like a king's cloak, and by her side an old Ceres, a peasant woman with a jug, adorned with the fruit of viburnum, a girl with a bowl of apples and a beautiful black-haired boy, holding a black ram. This is an offering of milk, fruit and flocks, a Slavic hecatomb in honour of the immortal Sun god, the radiant Helios (Władysław Witwicki, Fryderyk Pautsch, Sztuki Piękne [Fine Arts] 1927/1928, no 4, p. 132). The alleged primordiality of the Hutsuls was identified by Pautsch with the relics of the oldest history of the whole Slavic region, and the historical importance of folk beliefs, rituals and costumes was to be increased by cross-cultural dependencies.

Szymon Piotr Kubiak

Information about the object

Information about this object

Other names

Evening sacrifice

Author / creator

Pautsch Fryderyk (1877–1950) (malarz)

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 141 cm, width: 121 cm

Object type

painting

Creation time / dating

1910

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Lwów (Europa, Ukraina)

Identification number

MNS/SE-M/451

Location / status

object is not displayed now

You might also like:

Add note

Edit note

0/500

Jakiś filtr
Data od:
Era
Wiek:
+
Rok:
+
Data do:
Era
Wiek:
+
Rok:
+
asd