The National
Gallery of Slovenia is commemorating its 100th anniversary with an exhibition
of life and work of Ivana Kobilca, one of the most famous Slovenian artists of
all time.
The
formation of Ivana Kobilca as a painter took place in the last two decades of
the 19th century, when realism in Europe became acceptable for the
growing middle class which, through politics and ideology, controlled the
entire art production. She spent most of her
adult life in foreign capitals: after Vienna she studied in Munich, lived in
Paris, Sarajevo and Berlin, from where she returned to Ljubljana only at the
onset of the First World War. During her turbulent stay in Paris and the almost
idyllic years in Sarajevo, she also painted outdoors, and later in Berlin and
Ljubljana dedicated herself to still lifes.
In the
fourty-six years of her creative life Ivana Kobilca worked in world art centres
where she modelled her idiom on the greatest European naturalistic and symbolists
painters. She was associate member of the French Société nationale des
beaux-arts and was presented at their Salon three times. She exhibited all over
Europe and was the only Slovenian artist to follow regularly and directly the
exhibitions of three principal Secessions (Vienna, Munich, Berlin). She carried
out prestigious commissions for Church and secular authorities in her homeland
and in Bosnia, and, being skilled in establishing social contacts, she managed
to portray people from all social strata and of all ages -- from Berlin
millionaires, politicians, middle-class ladies and children to original rustic
characters from Upper Carniola.
Lack of
academic training, delicate health, touchiness about criticism, and occasional
undue haste did not stop her. Kobilca put to the test everything she could:
from Nietzschean bohemian lifestyle to vegetarianism and fencing and together
with her female friends and acquaintances she belonged to the first women in
modern era to succeed in winning recognition in the exclusively male
profession.
The first
retrospective of Ivana Kobilca in the last four decades features around 140
works of art from all periods and genres. Kobilca shared common art interests and places of
training with other Slovenian realists of her generation and the exhibition
features pivotal works of her contemporaries Jurij Šubic
(1855–1890), Anton Ažbe (1862–1905), Jožef Petkovšek (1861–1898) and Ferdo
Vesel (1861–1946).
The exhibition is
made of twelve chapters, which explore the development of Kobilca’s motifs from
Munich portrait studies and orientalism, child portraits and genre scenes,
interior genre to nudes and middle class portrait. Besides the context of
Kobilca’s plein air painting, the circumstances of the allegoric picture Slovenia Bows to Ljubljana are explained,
also, as is the life and work of the artist in some of the cities she sojourned
in: Ljubljana in the early and late periods, Paris, Sarajevo and Berlin.
Besides her popular
works, such as Summer and Woman Drinking Coffee, the exhibition
includes paintings from private collections that are almost unknown to the
wider public. Together, the pictures reflect Kobilca’s creative force and
varied influences of European artistic epicentres.
Celebrations, marking the 100th anniversary of the National Gallery of Slovenia, are under the honorary patronage of His Excellency Mr Borut Pahor, President of the Republic of Slovenia.
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"Painting is something beautiful ...", video
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Exhibition opening, video
Entrance fee
Regular 7 €; Reduced 3 €; Family 10 €
Authors of the exhibition
Mateja
Krapež, Jure Mikuž
In cooperation with
Sandra Bratuša, Mateja Breščak, Nataša Ciber, Barbara Jaki,
Michel Mohor, Alenka Simončič, Andrej Smrekar
Conservation-restoration
works
Tina Buh, Andrej Hirci, Miha Pirnat ml., Simona Škorja,
Martina Vuga
Vesna Obid
Zoja Bajdè
Graphic design
Ranko Novak
Translation
Alenka Klemenc
Exhibits loaned by
Bogoslovno semenišče Ljubljana
Protocol Services of the
Republic of Slovenia
Museum and Galleries of Ljubljana
National Museum of Slovenia
Museum of Fine Arts Budapest
Umjetnička galerija Bosne i Hercegovine, Sarajevo
Maribor Art Gallery
Private collectors
21 June 2018 – 10 February 2019
Narodna galerija
Prešernova 24
1000 Ljubljana