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Wolves in the night

Wolves in the night

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In February

In February

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Wolves attacking a sleigh

Wolves attacking a sleigh

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Race

Race

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Kunstdrucke von Alfred von Wierusz-Kowalski

Collection: Art prints by Alfred von Wierusz-Kowalski

Alfred von Wierusz-Kowalski was a Polish painter and is considered one of the most important representatives of Eastern European realism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was born in 1849 in Suwałki in what was then the Russian Empire and initially received his artistic training in Warsaw before furthering his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden and finally in Munich, where he settled permanently and became a permanent fixture in the international artistic community there. The Munich school of painting, with its emphasis on technical precision and narrative power, left deep traces in his development, without, however, displacing his Polish pictorial world and his unmistakable thematic focus.

Early on, Wierusz-Kowalski developed a pronounced preference for scenes of Polish and Eastern European rural life, especially for depictions of horses, sleighs and wolves in the winter steppes and snow-covered expanses. It was not the idyllic pastoral that interested him, but the harsh, often threatening reality of life in the vast plains of Eastern Europe - scenes of drama and tension in which man and animal clash in inhospitable nature. His wolf hunting scenes in particular and his depictions of troikas racing through snowy landscapes at night lent his work a narrative immediacy and emotional intensity that appealed greatly to the public of his time.

From the 1880s onwards, Wierusz-Kowalski established himself as one of the most sought-after and successful painters of his generation in the German-speaking world and beyond. A central feature of his work is the combination of technical mastery and dramatic narrative power. His depictions of horses in particular are among the most convincing of their kind in 19th century European painting: he knew the anatomy and behavior of these animals with an intimacy that lends his pictures a credibility and liveliness that goes far beyond mere animal pieces. He always knew how to embed the individual animal in a moody, atmospherically dense landscape that lends the overall picture an additional emotional dimension.

Throughout his life, Wierusz-Kowalski remained closely connected to Polish culture and the awareness of his origins, even though he spent the majority of his life in Munich. His paintings convey an image of Eastern European life that is somewhere between romantic transfiguration and realistic poignancy and made a foreign, fascinating world accessible to the Western European public. This cultural mediating role lends his work a dimension that goes beyond the purely painterly and makes it an important testimony to the European view of the East in the late 19th century.

Alfred von Wierusz-Kowalski died in Munich in 1915, leaving behind an extensive oeuvre that had enjoyed extraordinary success during his lifetime. In the course of the 20th century, like many representatives of academic realism, he temporarily fell into the shadow of modernism. In recent decades, however, his work has experienced a significant rediscovery. Today, his paintings are regarded as masterpieces of Eastern European realism and are in great demand on the international art market, while his depictions of horses, wolves and wintry steppe landscapes are valued as the most technically virtuoso and atmospherically convincing examples of their genre.