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alphonse mucha (1860-1939)
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f.auerbach
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[ a l p h o n s e m u c h a : b i o g . ]
"Mucha is to Art Nouveau what Nedved is to Czech football."
Yet at the height of his fame, Mucha left Paris, which he associated with commercial success, to seek a different kind of recognition as a 'serious' painter in the United States and in his native Czechoslovakia, thereby contributing to the ending of the creative phase of Art Nouveau. Within a few years he was totally forgotten. At least one major Paris graphics gallery bought up a vast quantity of his decorative panels, folded them in half, cut a window opening on one side, and used them as mounts or matts in which to display better known works. After all, the panels were cheaper than plain white card.
When the revival of interest in Art Nouveau began in the post-war years, none of the writers on the subject even mentioned Mucha.
Mucha's name gradually emerged from obscurity as first Art Nouveau dealers and then wholesalers of reproduction posters brought his images forward. His son Jiri Mucha - a distinguished novelist, war correspondent, translator and theatrical producer - organised exhibitions all over the world, patiently prodding and encouraging galleries and insitutions. He wrote a biography of his father, which was published in Czech and then in English, and wrote or participated in a stream of new books and articles about Mucha pere, who is probaly even more famous now than he was in his lifetime. His works are now displayed all over the world.
Alphonse Maria Mucha was born in Ivancice in South Moravia in 1860, the son of a local court usher and his second wife, a former governess. His mother wanted him to join the priesthood; his father hoped he would find some form of remunerative employment. He spent three years as a choir boy in Brno (where he met Leos Janacek) and when his voice broke, his father found him a job as a clerk.
The young Mucha was a poor clerk, but he devoted his spare time to drawing and to designing stage sets for local amateur theatre productions in which he also participated as an actor and producer.
Encouraged by his drawing teacher in Brno, Mucha applied to the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, but was turned down. He eventually came across a newspaper advertisement for a young scene
painter with the Viennese firm of Kautsky-Brioschi-Burghardt, a
large supplier of stage equipment and painters of theatrical scenery,
backcloths and curtains. Mucha sent them a group of drawings, was
accepted, and left for Vienna in 1879.
In December 1881 Vienna's great Ring
Theatre burned down, and some five hundred people died in the
conflagration. As the Ring Theatre had been one of his employer's
main clients, the most recently hired staff, including Mucha, were
dismissed. However, Mucha was certain fate had something good in
store for him, so he stayed in Vienna until most of his money was
used up, then arbitrarily chose a railway station and a destination on
the basis of the little money he had left. Thus he found himself in
Mikulov. Mikulov had a hotel, into which he moved, with a
restaurant in which he could order meals. The town also had a
bookseller, to whom he sold a drawing and through whom he built
up a steady business drawing portraits of the pretty townswomen.
He decorated the local theatre, painted its scenery, acted, played the
violin and guitar, and was soon invited to every local dance. He also
designed tombstone inscriptions and ornaments...next page
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