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Tivadar Alconiere

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Allegoric Riding Portrait painted in 1831 or 1837 is on display at the Hungarian National Gallery

Tivadar Cohn Hermann Alconiere (Hungarian: Alconière Tivadar, 1797–1865) was a 19th-century Austro-Hungarian painter. Cohn Hermann was his original family name.

He came from a rich Jewish family in Nagymarton, but quickly squandered his inheritance, after which he tried to make a living from painting.

He began studying art in Vienna in 1812. He continued his studies at the Vienna Academy between 1816 and 1820, where he also met the painters of the Nazarene group. Under their influence, he converted to Catholicism, in order to pursue a career in art, and adopted the surname Alconiere.[1] Nevertheless he never denied his Jewishness. In the 1830s, he fulfilled various orders in Rome together with the Nazarenes, and at the same time, in 1840, he did not fail to present himself at the first exhibition of the newly established Pesti Art Society. At that time, he only left the territory of Italy for short periods, as he was progressing well in his career as the court portrait painter of Prince Louis of Parma. The domestic recognition did not fail either, Ferenc Kazinczy, after visiting him in his studio, remarked: "Although our more famous people would paint themselves by him."

Alconiere's oeuvre is still waiting to be processed, many of his works are hidden, or we just don't know where they are, which is partly "thanks to" his wanderings. Various names have come up as a representation of his best-known painting preserved in the Hungarian National Gallery: the figure perched on the rocks, sitting on a black stilt, was once thought to be István Széchenyi, and the environment - with the rippling waves of the river, the steamboat looming in the distance - could suggest this, but at the same time, his facial features are undoubtedly different from Széchenyi's . It has been identified several times as a portrait of László Károlyi, but this can be ruled out based on biographical data and existing portraits.

On the other hand, there is a count Károlyi with whom the protagonist of Alconiere's equestrian picture can actually be identified, and this is György Károlyi (1802–1877), a good friend of István Széchenyi, a companion in his travels, one of the founders of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, one of the most significant figures of Hungarian public life and politics in the 19th century .

Alconiere presented two pictures at the first exhibition of the Pest Society in 1840. In the list of "oil paintings" exhibited in the first room, 9-10. number included two works by Alconiere, Napoleon on horseback and a picture of a horse (the latter presumably as a study for the former). Although we don't know the pictures - they are hidden or have been destroyed - it is no coincidence that Alconiere appeared in this epoch-making important presentation of Hungarian art life with a picture of a horse, even one whose model could have been Jacques-Louis David's iconic series with a similar theme. The painting Napoleon Crosses the Alps was completed between 1801 and 1806 in five versions. The first one, a year after the event, was made by the Spanish ruler IV. Károly ordered it from the artist. The figure, costume, and environment of Károlyi Alconiere's equestrian portrait, similar to Napoleon galloping on a prancing horse, in a cloak fluttering among the rocks of the Alps. We don't know when this picture was created - 1831, 1835 and 1837 also appear as the time of its creation - it is assumed that the painting presented at the Art Society exhibition is later, if not by much, but in any case the subject has obviously been preoccupying the painter for years.

Personal life

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Alconiere's private life was not without problems: "...for years he loved a Hungarian lady, whom he often painted... but he did not win her hand, he finally married someone else, but his wife went crazy and he fell into a depression because of this, he began to deteriorate..." What exactly is this "disorder" what it meant was described in the Neueste Nachrichten issue of October 10, 1863: Alconiere forged banknotes and was sent to prison. The painter already noted in a letter that the paper did not report that he was released after 21 days, his innocence having been proven.

Alconiere's whole life was a journey, after Italy in the territory of the Habsburg Empire, sometimes in Hungary, sometimes in Vienna, where he enjoyed the friendship and company of the best painters of the period, Josef Danhauser and Friedrich von Amerling, who painted him. In the period between the two world wars, the Wolf Museum in Kismarton exhibited a small picture of her from her apartment there, Múlt és Jövő (Past and Future) published a portrait of Miksáné Sauer in 1939. We also know, also from Csatkai's writings, that after his wife's death, he supported himself by creating stone drawings with unusual themes and solutions, reminiscent of the Arcimboldo images of Mannerism. We can get an idea of his last years from a letter written to Mihály Mayr, a painter friend from Nagymarton, which is now kept by the Sopron Museum, together with his portrait.[2]

References

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  1. ^ Adrian M. Darmon (2003). "Alconiere, Cohn Theodore, Tivadar dit Alconiere". Autour de l'art juif: encyclopédie des peintres, photographes et sculpteurs. Carnot. p. 36. ISBN 2-84855-011-2.
  2. ^ Kohn, Hermann. The life story of Alconiere Tivadar.