János Thorma

The native form of this personal name is Thorma János. This article uses the Western name order.
Self-portrait, c.1910
The Martyrs of Arad, the Sixth of October

János Thorma (24 April 1870 5 December 1937) was a Hungarian[1] painter. A representative figure of the Nagybánya artists' colony, which started in 1896 at what is today Baia Mare, Romania, he moved through different styles. He shifted from the naturalism that was the aesthetic of the colony, to historical subjects, to romantic realism and to a Post-Impressionism style. His work is held by the Hungarian National Gallery, the Thorma János Múzeum, regional museums and private collectors.

In 1966, the Hungarian National Gallery held a major commemorative exhibition, The Art of Nagybánya, commemorating the innovations of Thorma and fellow artists.[2] In February 2013, it opens a major retrospective of more than 100 pieces of János Thorma's work, drawing from numerous institutions and private collectors in Europe.

Early life and education

János Thorma was born in 1870 in Kiskunhalas, Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary to Béla Thorma, a tax agency cashier, and his wife Gizella Fekete.[3] The family moved to Nagybánya when the youth was 14. He began to study art at Bertalan Székely's drawing school.[3]

At the age of 18, he went to Munich, where he studied from 1888 to 1890 under the Hungarian painter, Simon Hollósy, who held free classes. Following a path similar to other young artists from Austria-Hungary, in 1891 and 1893–95, Thorma also went to Paris, where he studied at the Académie Julian.[3]

Career

His first significant painting, Szenvedők (The Bereaved), was exhibited at the Budapest Art Gallery, then at the Paris Salon in 1894. In 1896, on the occasion of the millennium of the Magyars' conquest of Pannonia, he presented his painting about The 13 Martyrs of Arad, Aradi vértanúk (The Martyrs of Arad), which gained him nationwide renown in Hungary. Many of his early works were large canvases on historical themes.

In 1896 he was one of the founders of the Nagybánya artists' colony, whose members included Simon Hollósy, Karoly Ferenczy, and Istvan Reti, who achieved international recognition.[4] From 1902-27, he was a teacher at the Nagybánya Painters' Association, becoming its president in 1917.[3]

In 1898 Thorma began to paint Talpra magyar! (Rise up, Hungarian!), on which he worked intermittently almost to his death.[5]

His first paintings were naturalistic, and an early inspiration was Jules Bastien-Lepage. Thorma used the artist's most popular work, the Portrait of Sarah Bernhardt, in 1892 as a model in his own painting of Irén Biltz. Thorma's painting had the characteristic atmosphere of Art Nouveau.[5]

As a young man, Thorma felt that naturalism offered him too little to achieve his goals as a painter, and he was inspired by German romanticism (as shown in his The Bereaved, 1892) and French classicism (The Martyrs of Arad, 1893–94). In 1897, following a long trip to Western Europe, Thorma painted several Biblical subjects, including Békesség veletek "Pax vobiscum", which show the influence of Rembrandt.[5]

After 1900, Thorma's work turned toward realism: Kocsisok között (Among the Coachmen) (1902); Október elsején (On the First of October) (1903); Kártyázók (The Card-Players, 1904). In 1906-07 he showed influence from Spanish sources in his Cigányutca (The Gypsies' Street, 1907). He also was inspired by the French painter, Paul Gauguin, as shown in Húsvéti kenyérszentelés (The Blessing of the Bread) and Templombamenők (People Going toward Church), both ca. 1910.[5]

After 1920 Thorma developed his own en plein air style, based on his substantial knowledge of painting. He used certain elements of neo-classicism in such works as Tavasz (Spring, 1920) and Fürdés után (After Bathing, 1928). In the last decade of his life, he painted impressionistic landscapes and portraits.[5]

In 1918 he took his historical works to Hungary, as he expected Romania to be invaded at the end of World War I. He stored them in Debrecen.[1]

When the Treaty of Trianon established a separate Kingdom of Romania incorporating the Nagybánya region, only Thorma remained in the town; the other Hungarian painters left.[6] The government encouraged him to continue the naturalistic "official Nagybánya school," although his own work had developed in quite different ways.[6]

In September 1929, Thorma, aged 59 and until then a bachelor, married Margit Kiss, a painting disciple and distant relative. He died in Baia Mare eight years later.[5]

Since the late twentieth century, and the opening of the Eastern Bloc, there has been renewed attention given to the innovations of the Naybánya artists. In collaboration with other institutions, the Hungarian National Gallery has organized a major retrospective of Thorma's work, consisting of more than 100 pieces. Its title classifies him as a representative painter of the Barbizon school in Hungary. The exhibit opens in February 2013, through the collaboration of the "Art Museum in Nagybánya, the Janus Pannonius Museum in Pécs, the Móra Ferenc Museum in Szeged, the Déri Museum in Debrecen, the Herman Ottó Museum in Miskolc, the Katona József Museum in Kecskemét, and the Thorma János Museum in Kiskunhalas, as well as Hungarian, German and Romanian private collectors."[4]

Exhibits

Legacy and honors

See also

Works

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Nagybányai mûvészek". István Réti (in Hungarian).
  2. 1 2 Valerie Majoros, "Lajos Tihanyi and his friends in the Paris of the nineteen-thirties", French Cultural Studies, 2000, Vol. 11:387, Footnote, p. 388, Sage Publications, accessed 30 January 2013
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Thorma János" (in Hungarian). Thorma János Múzeum, Kiskunhalas. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 János Thorma, the Painter of the Hungarian Barbizon, 8 February - 19 May 2013, Hungarian National Gallery
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 (Romanian) "Thorma János", Székely Museum of Ciuc
  6. 1 2 Bay, Miklós; Judit Boros; Jenő Muridán. "Thorma" (PDF) (in Hungarian). Retrieved 24 November 2009.

Further reading

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to János Thorma.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.