Franciszek Kostrzewski
{{Short description|Polish artist (1826–1911)}}
{{Lead too short|date=January 2022}}
File:Franciszek Kostrzewski.jpg
Franciszek Kostrzewski (19 April 1826, Warsaw – 30 September 1911, Warsaw) was a Polish illustrator, cartoonist, caricaturist, comics artist [https://www.lambiek.net/artists/k/kostrzewski_f.htm Kostrzewski] at Lambiek.net and painter in the Realistic style.
Biography
His father was the steward of a city estate. In 1831, following the November Uprising, his family moved to a rural estate in the Sandomierz Voivodeship. He later returned to Warsaw to pursue his studies.
By the time he reached the gymnasium level, he had grown tired of the curriculum and decided to become an artist. His father had other plans, however, and found him a position as a midshipman. Not long after, he was fired when his supervisor found him making sketches on important documents.{{citation needed|date=March 2016}} Following that incident, his father finally relented and, in 1844, he enrolled at the new {{ill|School of Fine Arts in Warsaw|pl|Szkoła Sztuk Pięknych w Warszawie}}.[http://www.agraart.pl/cgi-bin/obiekt.cgi?act=1&qt=1457050612&nr=19920 Biographical notes] @ Agra Art
His teachers there included Jan Feliks Piwarski, Chrystian Breslauer and Aleksander Kokular. During his studies, he travelled around the country, painting landscapes, cityscapes and genre scenes; including time spent in Kielce at the invitation of the prominent art collector Tomasz Zieliński (1802–1858). From 1852 to 1853, he worked under the direction of Henryk Pillati, painting decorations for steamships.[http://culture.pl/pl/tworca/franciszek-kostrzewski Brief biography and appreciation] @ Culture.pl
After a trip to Germany and Paris in 1856, he settled in Warsaw and contributed drawings to several publications, including Tygodnik Illustrowany, {{ill|Kłosy (magazine)|pl|Kłosy (czasopismo)|lt=Kłosy}} (Ears) and {{ill|Wędrowiec|pl|Wędrowiec (czasopismo)}} (The Wanderer). He was also one of many who illustrated the works of Adam Mickiewicz, as well as the lesser-known works of Władysław Syrokomla and Teofil Lenartowicz.
Over time, his illustrations came to be less critical or satirical and represent a realistic chronicle of life in the capital. He exhibited frequently at the Kraków Society of Friends of Fine Arts and its counterpart in Warsaw, as well as at several commercial salons. He published his memoirs in 1891.
Selected works
File:KostrzewskiFranciszek.Polowanie.1886.jpg|"Hunting": Illustration for Pan Tadeusz
File:PL Michał Bałucki-Grześ niepiśmienny 10a.jpeg|Illustration for
Grześ the Illiterate by
Michał Bałucki
File:Franciszek Kostrzewski Grajek.jpg|The Piper
File:Franciszek Kostrzewski Prawdziwy człowiek śmiechu na Saskiej Kępie.jpg|A True Man of Laughter in
Saska Kępa
See also
References
{{reflist}}
Further reading
- Irena Jakimowicz: Franciszek Kostrzewski, Wiedza Powszechna. Państwowe Wydawnictwo Popularno Naukowe, Warsaw, 1952.
- Janusz Durko (ed.) with Irena Tessaro-Kosimowa, Maria Suchodolska and Janina Obidzińska: Franciszek Kostrzewski: katalog prac, Museum of Warsaw, 1963
External links
{{commons category|Franciszek Kostrzewski}}
- [http://www.arcadja.com/auctions/en/kostrzewski_franciszek/artist/37063/ Arcadja Auctions: More works by Kostrzewski.]
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Category:Burials at Powązki Cemetery
Category:19th-century Polish painters
Category:19th-century Polish male artists
Category:20th-century Polish painters
Category:20th-century Polish male artists
Category:19th-century Polish illustrators
Category:20th-century Polish illustrators
Category:Polish magazine cartoonists
Category:Polish comics artists
Category:Polish landscape painters