Eduard Ole
{{short description|Estonian painter}}
{{External links|date=May 2022}}
{{Infobox artist
| name = Eduard Ole
| image =
| image_size = 150px
| caption = Eduard Ole in the 1970s
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1898|5|20}}
| birth_place = Kaagjärve, Kreis Werro, Governorate of Livonia
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1995|11|24|1898|5|20}}
| death_place = Stockholm, Sweden
| nationality = Estonian
| known_for = Painting
| training = Imperial Academy of Arts, St. Petersburg, Russia
| movement = Expressionism, Cubism, Post-Impressionism
| notable_works = Still Life with a Guitar, 1925
Passengers, 1929
Portrait of Conductor Simm, 1931
| patron =
| awards =
}}
Eduard Ole (20 May 1898 – 24 November 1995) was an Estonian painter.{{Cite web | url=http://digikogu.ekm.ee/eng/fpage/authors/author_id-478 | title=Eduard Ole | publisher=Eesti Kunstimuuseum | access-date=2 February 2011}} Some of his most representative works are on permanent exhibition at the Kumu Art Museum of Estonia.{{Cite web | url=http://digikogu.ekm.ee/eng/search?searchtype=simple&searchtext=ole%2C+eduard&sfrom=author&imageField.x=16&imageField.y=7 | title=Digital Art Museum: Ole, Eduard | publisher=Eesti Kunstimuuseum | access-date=17 May 2011}}
In 1973, Ole published in Sweden his two-volume illustrated memoirs {{lang|et|Suurel maanteel}} ("On the Big Highway") I and II.{{cite book |last1=Ole |first1=Eduard |title=Suurel maanteel I-II: Mälestused |trans-title=On the Big Highway I-II: Memories |year=1973 |publisher=s.n. |location=Stockholm |language=et }} A new edition of these books were published in Estonia in 2010.{{cite book |last1=Ole |first1=Eduard |others=Epilogue by Alur Reinaus |title=Suurel Maanteel I-II |trans-title=On the Big Highway I-II |year=2010 |orig-year=1973 |publisher=Eesti Päevaleht and Akadeemia |location=Tallinn |language=et |isbn=978-9949-452-49-1 }}
Expressionism, Cubism
Ole was the seventh child in a farmer's family with eight children. Very young, Ole came in contact with modern western art by means of reproductions in the art school library and by visiting galleries and museums in Saint Petersburg and Moscow. He studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg, Russia between 1914 and 1918, where he became particularly influenced by German Expressionism.{{cite book | title=Eduard Ole: The Life and Work of the Artist| last=Mägi | first=Arvo | year=1978 | publisher=Estniska Kultursamfundet | location=Stockholm | isbn=91-7260-197-3 | page=32}}
Ole returned to Estonia in 1918, when his country became independent, and worked as a theatre designer, teacher of drawing, art critic and as of 1923, as a professional artist. That year, together with Friedrich Hist (1900–1941) and Felix Randel (1901–1977, named Johansen until 1936) he formed the Group of Estonian Artists in Tartu. This group was able to organize a whole series of exhibitions dedicated to Cubism experimentation, although Ole himself never became totally non-figurative, retaining a strong link with the material world. Their work was primarily distinguished by modest geometricized abstraction and decorative colourism suggested by Synthetic Cubism, rather than by explorations of simultaneity or collage. A good example of this phase is the work [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095325/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-4811 Natüürmort kitarriga] ({{langx|en|Still life with a guitar}}) of 1925.
Ole's cubist period lasted only until 1926. That year he began to draw with India ink. Some examples of this phase are the works [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095722/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-8847 Rannal] ({{langx|en|At the Beach}}) of 1926, [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095732/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-8845 Jalgpallurid] ({{langx|en|Football players}}) of between 1926 and 1927, [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095744/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-8848 Seltskond] ({{langx|en|A Company}}) and [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095819/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-944 Fokstrott] ({{langx|en|Foxtrot}}) both of 1927.
Trips to Paris and Portraits
In 1925 Ole had his works exhibited in Paris at the Salon des Artistes Indépendants organized by the Société des Artistes Indépendants,{{cite book | title=Eduard Ole: The Life and Work of the Artist | last=Mägi | first=Arvo | year=1978 | publisher=Estniska Kultursamfundet | location=Stockholm | isbn=91-7260-197-3 | page=8}} to which followed a study trip to Paris in 1927, a trip that gave him fresh impulses. During this trip Ole painted motives inspired in the city such as [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095847/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5419 Pariisi motiiv] ({{langx|en|Parisian motif}}), [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095854/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-4505 Pariis, Eiffeli torn] ({{langx|en|Eiffel Tower, Paris}}), and [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095937/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5420 Pariis] ({{langx|en|Paris}}).
As a consequence to Ole's first study trip to Paris, the cubist severity of form vanished and he preferred to depict large figurative compositions, dramatically staged, with soft planes and colours and nuanced pastel tones. It was during this time (1929) that [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095223/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-784 Reisijad] ({{langx|en|Passengers}}) and [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009100024/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5418 Hobuseujutajad. Pannoo kavand] ({{langx|en|Horse Swimmers. Mural Design}}) were composed. Along these, with the watercolours in soft tones that Ole brought from Paris, he also made colourful gouaches of Estonian landscapes, such as [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009100106/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5412 Lõuna-Eesti maastik] ({{langx|en|South Estonian Landscape}}) of 1932–1933.{{cite book | title=Eduard Ole: The Life and Work of the Artist | last=Mägi | first=Arvo | year=1978 | publisher=Estniska Kultursamfundet | location=Stockholm | isbn=91-7260-197-3 | page=16}}
In the beginning of the 1930s Ole started painting portraits of Estonian cultural personalities of international standing. The series started with [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095658/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-4504 Dirigent Simmi portree] ({{langx|en|Portrait of Conductor Simm}}) in 1931, which won the first prize of a national portrait contest. Others followed such as [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095439/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5413 H. Visnapuu portree] ({{langx|en|Portrait of H. Visnapuu}}) and [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095454/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5414 Kirjanik August Gailiti portree] ({{langx|en|Portrait of Writer August Gailit}}) in 1932, [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095636/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5415 Fr. Tuglase portree] ({{langx|en|Portrait of Fr. Tuglas}}) of between 1935 and 1942, and [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009095413/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5410 Konstantin Pätsi portree] ({{langx|en|Portrait of Konstantin Päts}}) of 1936.
In 1937 Ole made a second study trip to Paris and after the trip he continued to paint landscapes, though it can be noticed, entwined with pastel colours, an increasing drama, as if sensing the new challenges that would face him in the near future. In 1941 Ole painted [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009100304/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5416 Narva Hermani kindlus] ({{langx|en|Hermann Castle in Narva}}). The 1942 paintings [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009100212/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5422 Maastik rahutu taevaga] ({{langx|en|Landscape in Turbulent Sky}}) and [https://web.archive.org/web/20111009100233/http://www.digikogu.ekm.ee/eesti19saj_1940/oid-5423 Maastik tuulikuga] ({{langx|en|Landscape with a Windmill}}) seem to close this phase of his work.
References
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Category:People from Valga Parish
Category:People from Kreis Werro
Category:Estonian illustrators
Category:20th-century Estonian painters
Category:20th-century Estonian male artists
Category:Estonian World War II refugees