Ioannis Doukas
{{Short description|Greek painter}}
{{for|several persons named John/Ioannis Doukas|John Doukas (disambiguation)}}
File:DOUKAS5.jpg and Delilah]]
Ioannis Doukas or Dukas ({{langx|el|Ιωάννης Δούκας}}, 1841–1916) was a Greek painter and one of the main representatives in 19th century portrait painting in Greece.{{cite web|title=Mature Urban Portraiture|url=http://www.averoffmuseum.gr/site/content.php?sel=16&setlocale=2&elemid=121|publisher=E. Averof Gallery|accessdate=29 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131230234429/http://www.averoffmuseum.gr/site/content.php?sel=16&setlocale=2&elemid=121|archive-date=30 December 2013|url-status=dead}}
Life
Doukas was born in 1841, in Gjirokastër (then Ottoman Empire, modern Albania). He started his studies in art at the School of Fine Arts of Athens, Greece, in 1859. He continued his studies outside Greece: initially in the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich (1865-1868), being a student of the German painter Karl von Piloty. He then moved to Paris and became student of Jean-Léon Gérôme.{{cite web|title=Δούκας Ιωάννης|url=http://www.nationalgallery.gr/site/content.php?artist_id=4381&sel=352|work=nationalgallery.gr/|publisher=Εθνική Πινακοθήκη|accessdate=29 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304102753/http://www.nationalgallery.gr/site/content.php?artist_id=4381&sel=352|archive-date=4 March 2016|url-status=dead}}
Doukas worked as painter in a number of western European cities: Paris, Marseille and Vienna, where he became distinguished in the painting of portraits. At 1879 he returned to Greece, while continued to be focused in portrait painting. Doukas attended several artist's exhibitions in Greece and abroad, such as the Paris Salon. He died in Athens in 1916.
Work and legacy
His works include historical, mythological, biblical and allegorical representations, as well as the creating of copies of distinguished painters, like Peter Paul Rubens, Rembrandt and Anthony van Dyck. He painted also a religious icon of Jesus Christ, at the Greek-Orthodox Church of Saint Nicholas in Liverpool, England.{{cite journal|last=Sarafianos|first=Aris|title=The Diaspora of Greek Painting in the Nineteenth Century: Christou's Model and the Case of Marie Spartali-Stillman|journal=Historein|year=2006|volume=6|issue=65|url=http://epublishing.ekt.gr/el/6928/HISTOREIN/7005|page=153|access-date=2013-12-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131230234337/http://epublishing.ekt.gr/el/6928/HISTOREIN/7005|archive-date=2013-12-30|url-status=dead}}
Doukas is classified as one of the main representatives of the so-called 'Greek Munich School'; a group of 19th Greek artists that studied in the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich and were influenced by the movement of academic realism.{{cite web|title=Greek painters - School of Munich|url=http://www.yannisstavrou.gr/greekpainters.htm|publisher=yannisstavrou.gr|accessdate=29 December 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130704062411/http://www.yannisstavrou.gr/greekpainters.htm|archive-date=4 July 2013|url-status=dead}}
References
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External links
- [https://paletaart.wordpress.com/page/18/ Paintings of Ioannis Doukas] paletaart.wordpress.com (in Greek)
{{Greek artists of the Munich School}}
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Category:19th-century Greek painters
Category:20th-century Greek painters
Category:Academic staff of the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich
Category:Academy of Fine Arts, Munich alumni