Zefiryn Ćwikliński

Zefiryn Ćwikliński
Born Zefiryn (Zefir) Alojzy Ćwikliński
(1871-02-06)6 February 1871
Lviv, Poland, today Ukraine
Died 24 July 1930(1930-07-24) (aged 59)
Zakopane, Poland
Nationality Polish
Known for Painting

Zefiryn (Zefir) Alojzy Ćwikliński Ceferino (February 6, 1871 in Lviv July 24, 1930 in Zakopane) - Polish painter, known primarily for painting in the Tatra mountains.

Biography

He graduated from high school in Lviv, then for a year, he studied philosophy at the University of Lviv, and later, after moving to Kraków - in the years 1887-1889 - studied at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts where he was the student of Florian Cynk, Władysław Łuszczkiewicz, Feliks Szynalewski and Izydor Jabłoński. In 1893, he received a scholarship and continued his studies at the Vienna Academy with a historical painter and portraitist Christian Griepenkerla. He specialised in historic paintings, portraits and those of different genres. With the lack of financial resources he was forced to return to the country.[1] After returning home, he was a teacher of art in Brody and Jarosław. As a result of political conflicts with school authorities he was dismissed. In 1898 he went to Italy and Dalmatia, where he spent half a year studying landscape painting. In 1904 he was one of the Grupy Sześciu in Lviv.[2]

Works of art

At first he created paintings of fairy-tale themes, he also worked as an illustrator (he published illustrations every Lviv fortnight in the "Faun" magazine, but also had illustrated books).[3] He had been strongly influenced by Władysław Podkowiński. Around 1897 he also made landscape paintings, of the area around Lviv. He arrived to the property of Stanisław Jerzy Hofmokl who in the village of Zarzecze bought an estate and mansion from the Kostheimów. When arriving he had painted landscapes and the Zarzecka chapel, "Zarzecze thought to be one of the most beautiful parts of Poland".[4] In 1908 he settled in Zakopane and since then he painted mostly landscapes of the Tatra Mountains, which are shown at exhibitions. He created many post cards which popularised the Tatra Mountains and him in the region.[5]

Czarny Staw, 1920, private

His popular and most notable works of art include:

Membership in organisations

Ćwikliński belonged to Zakopane's Union of Artists, he was also active in the Association of the Public Library.

Selected exhibitions

He exhibited in Lviv, Warsaw and Kraków, as well as abroad in (London, Kiev, Vienna, Budapest, Chicago). In 1930 at the international exhibition of mountaineering in Budapest his painting under the title of Limba had been distinguished and awarded.

References

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