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Antonietta Brandeis Art

Hungarian, 1849-1920

Known for her paintings of landmark structures in Italy, Antonietta Brandeis was born in Austria and moved to Venice at a young age to study at the Academy after she had been a student of Karel Javurek in Prague. Her signature works had minute detail and sparkling color. Her subject matter of familiar sights such as the Ponte Vecchio in Florence, Bridge of Sighs in Venice and Spanish Steps in Rome, and these pieces of artworks were much sought after by the wealthy Europeans and Americans on the Grand Tour in the 19th century.

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Artist: Antonietta Brandeis
Views of Venice (Pair)
By Antonietta Brandeis
Located in Belgravia, London, London
Views of Venice (a pair) by Antonietta Brandeis Austrian, 1848-1926 Oil on board Board size: 9.5 x 5.25 inches (each) Framed size: 13.5 x 9 (each) Both paintings are monogrammed lo...
Category

19th Century Antonietta Brandeis Art

Materials

Oil, Board

Ponte Alle Grazie, 1900-1910, by Antonietta Brandeis, Florence, Italy Painting
By Antonietta Brandeis
Located in Grand Rapids, MI
Antonieta Brandeis (Czech/Italian, 1848-1926) Signed: A. Brandeis (Lower, Right) " Ponte Alle Grazie ", Florence, Circa 1900-1910 Oil on Canvas 16 1/8" x 20" Housed in a 5" Gold...
Category

19th Century Realist Antonietta Brandeis Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

19th Century female artist Antonietta Brandeism Piazza San Marco, Venice
By Antonietta Brandeis
Located in Petworth, West Sussex
Antonietta Brandeis (Czech / Italian, 1848 – 1926) Piazza San Marco, Venice Oil on panel Inscribed with studio stamp on the reverse 8.1/4 x 4.3/4 in. (21 x 12.1 cm.) Born in the small Bohemian village of Miskowitz on January 13, 1848, Antonietta Brandeis lost her father at an early age, and probably then moved north to Prague with her widowed mother. At some point in the 1860s, she began studying painting with the Czech artist Karel Javůrek (1815-1909). Although nothing is known about the Brandeis family finances during this period, it would have been unusual for a bourgeois young woman to study painting in any serious fashion; this suggests that perhaps Antonietta’s mother was hoping to provide a marketable skill for her daughter in the world of fine art. During the 1850s-and 1860s, Prague was the center of the Czech National Revival, a cultural movement whose purpose was the rejuvenation of the Czech language as well as the reclamation of a uniquely Czech identity after centuries under the domination of the Hapsburg Empire. Brandeis’s instructor Javůrek seems to have sympathized with this movement, creating history paintings based on Czech–rather than Hapsburg–moments of significance. Brandeis studied with Javůrek for a brief period, undoubtedly learning the basics of academic painting. It is likely that he also introduced her to the artistic ideas then current in Belgium and France, having studied himself with Gustave Wappers at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp and with Thomas Couture at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. This exposure to European Romanticism and Realism would have offered the young Brandeis a sophisticated understanding of contemporary aesthetic issues. In the late 1860s, Brandeis left Prague and moved to Venice with her mother, who had married a Venetian gentleman. Once there, she enrolled in the Accademia di belle arti (Academy of Fine Arts) studying with Michelangelo Grigoletti, Domenico Bresolin, Napoleone Nani, and Pompeo Marino Molmenti, all of whom were mainstream academic painters. She graduated in 1872 with a number of honors to her credit, and a Premio award in landscape painting. According to the listing in the Atti della reale Accademia di belle arti in Venezia dell’anno 1872, Brandeis was one of only two women graduating that year, the other being Carolina Higgins, an English woman. The admission of women to officially sponsored fine arts academies in Europe and the US was rare in the 1870s, and enrollment in life classes where nude models posed was almost universally unacceptable for female students. The fact that Brandeis and Higgins seem to have been the only women at the Accademia in the early 1870s tends to suggest that they participated in the same classes as their male classmates. In fact, Brandeis is cited for an award in the “study of the nude”. After graduation, Brandeis began to establish a career as a landscape painter in Venice. In 1873, she showed four paintings at the annual November exposition at the Accademia; these included one portrait, two landscapes, and one vedute of the Grand Canal that was commissioned by an English woman. Although there is no record of who this English woman was, it is tempting to think that she may have been someone Brandeis met through her classmate Carolina Higgins. Over the next few decades, Brandeis seems to have exhibited regularly at the annual Accademia shows, but her primary focus was increasingly on painting Venetian scenes (vedute) that appealed to the always plentiful crowd of visitors to Venice. She specialized in relatively small scale paintings of landmarks in her adopted city, and gradually became part of a community of expatriate artists who shared this interest. Among her friends were the Peruvian artist Federico de Campo and many of the Spanish artists then living in Venice such as Mariano Fortuny, Martin Rico and Rafael Senet. It should be noted too that by the end of the nineteenth century, Venice had become a regular stop for any painter who was particularly fascinated with color and light. Some, like the Americans Walter Gay and John Singer Sargent, spent months or even years living there, and others simply made regular visits, such as Pierre-August Renoir and Claude Monet. However, nearly all painters who traveled through Europe made at least one journey to see Venice’s unique environment. More important for painters like Brandeis were the travelers who came as tourists and wanted a souvenir to take home with them. By the late nineteenth century the aristocratic tradition of the Grand Tour had been considerably democratized by the industrial revolution, which had not only created a newly wealthy merchant class, but had provided the railroad as a means of convenient travel across long distances. Venice was no longer the exotic province of the European aristocracy, but a city that lured bourgeois romantics from all over the world. Brandeis’s images of the city were especially popular with Austrian and English visitors. Brandeis also painted at least three known altarpieces, all for churches in what is today southern Croatia. In the late 1870s when she received the initial commission, the Dalmatian coast of Croatia had trading and cultural ties to Italy dating back to the Roman Empire; however, it was the region surrounding the Republic of Venice that was most influential in the nineteenth century. During this time, the new bishop of Split (Spoleto), Marko Kalogjera, was actively involved in building new churches in Croatia as well as updating the older ones, and it is likely that he was instrumental in hiring Venetian painters for a variety of commissions. In fact, Michelangelo Grigoletto, one of Brandeis’s instructors at the Accademia, had earlier received a commission for a painting in a parish church in the town of Vodice. Given the remote location, it is not surprising that Bishop Kalogjera would turn to Venice when hiring artists for major projects in the towns of Blato and Smokvici. The religious traditions of Venetian painting are clearly evident in Brandeis’s Madonna and Child with St. Vitus at the Church of St. Vitus in Blato. The composition is based on the tradition of the sacra conversazione (sacred conversation) between the Virgin Mary and the saints. In this image, Brandeis presents not only St. Vitus, but also a young man who is apparently suffering from one of the illnesses that the saint was known to cure. The large canvas is surrounded by architectural elements above the altar and creates a dramatic statement as worshippers look up at the elegant Madonna. Brandeis also created two paintings for the church of Our Lady of Carmel in the neighboring town of Smokvici. One features another sacra conversazione, this time with St. Lucia, St. Anthony of Padua and St. Roch. The other is an altarpiece showing the Presentation of Christ in the Temple. These three large scale paintings must have been started in 1879 or 1880 and probably finished several years later. Concurrent with the major altarpiece commissions, Brandeis continued to produce many vedute for travelers in Venice. She also made a number of trips to Florence, Bologna and Rome where she painted cityscapes of the architectural and urban scenes featuring classical and renaissance motifs. The popularity of her work was further enhanced by the production of chromolithographs of her paintings, probably beginning in the late 1880s or 1890s. She expanded her market even further in 1880 when she exhibited three paintings at the International Exposition in Melbourne. In her personal life, Antonietta married Antonio Zamboni on October 27, 1897; Zamboni was a knight of the Order of Saints Maurizio and Lazzaro, originally founded by the Duke of Savoy in 1572, but closely affiliated with the newly united Kingdom of Italy in the late nineteenth century. Brandeis’s enthusiasm for Venice seems to have waned somewhat by 1900 when she was quoted as saying that she was still “a foreigner” in Venice, and she no longer participated in any Italian exhibitions, but sent all of her paintings to London. [v] Brandeis’s early association with English collectors seems to have evolved into a relationship that served her well for many decades. Nonetheless, she remained in Venice until the death of her husband in 1909, at which time she moved to Florence. The full story of Antonietta Brandeis’s life remains unknown, but she seems to have been a woman who challenged social conventions on many levels: as a woman studying in an almost exclusively male academy...
Category

19th Century Academic Antonietta Brandeis Art

Materials

Oil, Panel

"Florence´s Bridge", 19th Century Oil on Canvas by Antonietta Brandeis
By Antonietta Brandeis
Located in Madrid, ES
ANTONIETTA BRANDEIS Czechoslovakian, 1848 - 1926 FLORENCE´S BRIDGE signed "ABrandeis" lower right oil on canvas 10-3/5 x 14-4/5 inches (27 x 37.5 cm.) unframed PROVENANCE Private Collection, Barcelona Antonietta Brandeis (also known as Antonie Brandeisová) (1848–1926), was a Czech-born Italian landscape, genre and portrait painter, as well as a painter of religious subjects for altarpieces. She was born on January 13, 1848, in Miskovice (near Kutná Hora) in Bohemia, Austria-Hungary.[2] The first bibliographical indication of Antonietta Brandeis dates from her teens, when she is mentioned as a pupil of the Czech artist Karel Javůrek of Prague.[3] After the death of Brandeis' father, her mother, Giuseppina Dravhozvall, married the Venetian Giovanni Nobile Scaramella; shortly afterward the family apparently moved to Venice. In the 1867 registry of the Venetian Academy of Fine Arts, Brandeis is listed as being enrolled as an art student. At this time, Brandeis would have been nineteen, and one of the first females to receive academic instruction in the fine arts in Italy. In fact, the Ministry granted women the legal right to instruction in the fine arts only in 1875, by which time Brandeis had finished her education at the Academy. Brandeis’s professors at the Venetian Academy of Fine Arts include Michelangelo Grigoletti and Napoleone Nani for life drawing, Domenico Bresolin for landscape, Pompeo Marino Molmenti for painting and Federico Moja for perspective. Already during her first years of study there is evidence of Brandeis' skill-in her first year she is awarded prizes and honors in Perspective and Life Drawing. Brandeis’ continuing excellence and diligence in her artistic studies during the five years she spends at the Academy is attested to in the lists of prize-winning students of the Academy “Elenco alunni premiati Accademia Venezia in Atti della Reale Accademia di Belle Arti in Venezia degli anni 1866-1872”.[4] It includes numerous mentions of prizes and high honours won by Brandeis in Art History, Perspective, Life Drawing, Landscape and Anatomical Drawing, Drawing of Sculpture, and “Class of Folds”. It is in Venice at the Academy that Brandeis perfected her skills as a meticulous landscape and cityscape painter, with intricate and luminous details in the tradition of the eighteenth-century “vedutisti”. In 1870, while still a student at the Academy, she participated in her first exhibition; that of the Società Veneta Promotrice di Belle Arti with the oil painting Cascina della Madonna di Monte Varese. She is documented as having exhibited eight paintings during the years 1872 to 1876 with the Società Veneta Promotrice di Belle Arti, both landscapes and genre scenes. In the exhibit of 1875 her landscape Palazzo, Marin Falier is sold to M. Hall of London for 320 lire, a first indication of the success Brandeis will achieve with foreign collectors of her work (particularly the English and German visitors to Italy on the Grand Tour circuit). During these same years, she showed two paintings in the Florentine exhibit Promotrice Fiorentina. The first painting, entitled “Gondola” is a subject which she repeats in new variations throughout her career with great success. The second, perhaps a genre painting, is entitled “Buon dì !” The two paintings remained unsold and were presented at the same exhibition the following year, together with two more genre scene paintings. In 1876 and 1877 she exhibited three landscapes of Venice at the Promotrice Veneta, which sold to foreign collectors. In November 1877 Brandeis showed the large painting Palazzo Cavalli a Venezia at the exhibition of the Hungarian Fine Arts Society in Budapest. In both Florence and Budapest, Brandeis showed her work under the name “Antonio Brandeis”. The biographer De Gubernatis offers the following explanation for the change of name: “her first pictures received praise and criticism; she took the criticism, but when she was praised as a woman she was annoyed, and therefore exhibited under the name Antonio Brandeis.” During the years 1878 to 1893 Brandeis painted and exhibited numerous works, primarily scenes of Venice, and although she resided chiefly in that city she also traveled and painted in Verona, Bologna, Florence, and Rome. As well as in Venice and Florence, she exhibited in Turin, Milan, and Rome. In 1880 she was present at the International Exposition of Melbourne with three paintings: Palazzo Cavalli, A Balcony in Venice and The Buranella- native of Burano Island near Venice. Brandeis was a prolific painter, and often replicated her most popular subjects with only slight variations. She was represented in Venice at the photographer Naya’s studios in Piazza San Marco and in Campo San Maurizio and in Florence she collaborated with the picture dealer Giovanni Masini. During this period of intense activity painting landscapes en plein air and genre scenes, Brandeis also is documented in De Gubernatis as a painter of religious altarpieces. Several of these altarpieces can be found on the Island of Korcula in Croatia. Two are visible in the parish church of Smokvici and of in the church of St. Vitus in Blato. In the sacristy of the Cathedral of Korcula is a Madonna with Christ Child painted by Brandeis. For the same church she also painted a copy of the central panel of Giovanni Bellini’s triptych from the Venetian Church of Santa Maria dei Frari Gloriosa (1488). In 1899, for the main altar of the chapel of St. Luke in the Korcula town cemetery, Brandeis painted a St. Luke, which shows the sparkling colors and free impasto typical of her plein air oil paintings. On October 27th 1897 at the age of 49, Brandeis married the Venetian Antonio Zamboni, a knight and officer of the Italian Crown and knight of the Order of SS. Maurizio and Lazzaro. The couple continued to reside in Venice and Brandeis continued to show at Italian exhibitions in Venice, Florence, and Rome although more sporadically and with fewer works than before. Although she participated in the International Exposition of Watercolourists in Rome in 1906 with a “Study” and in the Società Promotrice delle Belle Arti in Florence in 1907 and 1908 with two oil paintings, De Gubernatis quotes Brandeis as saying in 1906, that even though she resides in Venice “I am a foreigner, and for some time I have not taken part in Italian Exhibitions, sending all my paintings to London.[3] Antonio Zamboni died 11...
Category

1890s Realist Antonietta Brandeis Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

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