Emilia Bayer

Emilia Bayer, or Emilia N. Bayer was born May 5, 1934 in Sofia, Bulgaria. She studied sculpture and ceramic at the Akademy of Arts in Sofia. Since finishing the Akademy in 1964 she works as a free lance sculptor. At the beginning she also took commissions for works in applied graphics, book- and calligraphic design.

During 1973–1975 she designed her main work in Bulgaria – 250m² stone reliefs for the new building of the Theatre Sofia in Sofia. The subject was the development of play-acting in the history of mankind. This work of art is thought to be an exceptionally well turned out synthesis of architecture and sculpture.

In 1975 she moved to Berlin. In the following decade she took commissions for more than 10 larger-than-life sculptures in public parks and buildings.[1] Her main work in Berlin – and also the beginning of the end – was the commission to design reliefs for the new building of the Friedrichstadt-Palace (1982–1984) – the greatest varieté theatre in Europe.[2] Of the originally planned 12 reliefs only six were destined to be realised, but at last only four came true. Afterwards due to the dissident actions of her husband she could not get other commissions; even contracts already given were foreclosed. She could no longer show her works at exhibitions.

When the new politics of the communist administration became clear, the Bayer family applied for emigration visas, which were at last granted after more than four years of fighting the bureaucracy. These four years of a de facto ban to exhibit and publish any of her works caused an irredemable break in Mrs. Bayer's specialty – applied sculpture on buildings.

Today she concentrates on the realms of figurative porcelain, oil-pastels and oil paintings.

Important works

Her works are on display in New York, Boston, Seattle, Paris, Hanover, Berlin, Leipzig, Wiesbaden, Munich, Moskow, Warsaw, Sofia; and in museums and collections in Berlin, Sopot (Poland), Faenza (Italy), and Sofia (National Gallery).

Distinctions

Literature

Nikolova-Bayer, Emilia: I Maestri Della Ceramica Moderna 1984/The Masters Of Modern Ceramics 1984; edition Faenza Editrice S.p.A. 1984

References

External links

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