'Variations On Realism From Munkácsy To Mednyánszky' Exhibition @ Hungarian National Gallery
- 8 Jan 2024 4:34 PM
With works displayed in six rooms and built around six themes, Variations on Realism – From Munkácsy to Mednyánszky explores the changes that took place in the depiction of reality.
The Hungarian National Gallery’s recently revamped permanent exhibitions (Art in the 19th Century – from the Age of Reforms to the Turn of the Century and Modern Times) take a fresh look at the art of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th through new perspectives adopted in accordance with a more up-to-date scientific approach.
The next permanent exhibition that awaited a similar renewal was the one focusing on Mihály Munkácsy’s art, which had last been re-arranged in 2012. The sequence of rooms re-organised according to the new concept now forms the last section of the permanent exhibition halls on the museum’s first floor encompassing the art of the 19th century.
The previous, somewhat rigid monographic grouping of works was replaced in recent years by an approach that discusses artists and artworks in a larger context and highlights broader connections between them.
Munkácsy’s masterpieces (e.g. The Condemned Cell and the Woman Carrying Brushwood) as well as works by László Paál, Lajos Deák Ébner, Adolf Fényes, József Koszta and Gyula Rudnay continue to occupy a distinctive place at the permanent exhibition Variations on Realism.
Besides these artists, the art of László Mednyánszky is also given prominence. Walking through the revamped exhibition halls visitors can view not only the well-known cardinal works but also ones that had previously been seen by the public only on rare occasions and had remained in storage. As a novelty, the pictures by Hungarian masters have been augmented with an international selection.
This change was necessitated by the fact, among others, that many of the featured Hungarian artists, with Munkácsy at the helm, pursued their careers abroad, were active on the international art scene and made a name for themselves at exhibitions in foreign countries, while building their reputations spanning many countries through the international art dealing market.
The international context is furnished in each section of the exhibition by a foreign artist, such as Narcisse Virgilio Diaz de la Peña (who was an important master of the artists’ colony in Barbizon besides László Paál), Friedrich August von Kaulbach (who exhibited his works at the Paris Salon), Albert von Keller, Louis‑Ernest Barrias, and the Austrian painter August von Pettenkofen (who was active in the Hungarian town of Szolnok too).
The backbone of the exhibition is Realism and its variations, as the title also states, and the central concept explores the depiction of reality from Munkácsy to Mednyánszky.
Early on in the history of art, artists were preoccupied with the idea of capturing reality or conveying the world surrounding them as precisely as possible.
However, it is the 19th century that can be regarded as the century of realist and naturalist strivings: it was then that painters and sculptors embarked upon the mission of providing an authentic and objective presentation of the society and the reality of their time.
Spanning a period from the 1860s to the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, the exhibition portrays the emergence, flourishing and decline of Realism and Naturalism, i.e. the process of how the artists of the day experimented with different approaches to capturing reality.
A bygone era – that of the late-19th century with its small town streets, rural landscapes, as well as scenes and colourful interiors of Hungarian villages – comes alive as visitors walk through the halls, while the sumptuous milieu of the wealthy haute bourgeoisie and the daily lives of the poor and destitute living in towns are evoked in genre scenes set in urban environments.
Realist and Naturalist artists typically presented everyday reality through the direct observation of the modern world. In his masterpieces Mihály Munkácsy showed the profound drama of his age, while László Mednyánszky’s powerful vagrant pictures and landscapes parted with Munkácsy’s tradition and introduced a new quality of capturing reality.
One of the leading genres of 19th-century painting was the landscape, which underwent significant changes in the second half of the 19th century both in its artistic approach and technique. Light and shade were assigned an ever-increasing role along with colours in landscapes painted in the spirit of en plen air, i.e. in the open.
Visitors are in for an exciting journey at the rearranged permanent exhibition leading from Mihály Munkácsy’s and László Paál’s French landscapes to László Mednyánszky’s mystifying depictions of nature clad in mist.
Tickets:
HUF 3,200
Phone:
+36 1 201 9082 | +36 20 439 7331 | +36 20 439 7325
Venue:
Hungarian National Gallery, Building B, 1st floor
1014 Budapest, Szent György tér 2.
More:
mng.hu
MTI Photo: Noémi Bruzák
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