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Art prints by Franz Anton Maulbertsch
Franz Anton Maulbertsch was an Austrian painter and graphic artist who is considered one of the most important representatives of Central European late Baroque and Rococo. He came from a humble background in Langenargen on Lake Constance and showed exceptional artistic talent at an early age. From 1739, Maulbertsch studied at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, where he intensively studied Baroque ceiling and fresco painting and was inspired by models such as Paul Troger and the great Venetian masters.
In his early works, Maulbertsch devoted himself primarily to religious and mythological themes and created large-format frescoes for churches and monasteries throughout the Habsburg lands. These expressive and lively compositions initially met with mixed reactions, as they were considered unusually bold and exuberantly colorful. However, as he matured and his reputation grew, Maulbertsch developed an unmistakable personal style in which blazing colors, dramatic lighting effects and an almost ecstatic figure dynamic took center stage.
A central feature of Maulbertsch's work remained the illusionistic spatial design, in particular the dissolution of ceilings and vaults into seemingly boundless celestial spaces. His frescoes in the Piarist Church in Vienna and the extensive paintings in monasteries such as Heiligenkreuz-Gutenbrunn and Kroměříž in Moravia are famous. These works demonstrate his masterful ability to merge architecture, figure and light into a captivating, almost theatrical unity.
In addition to his work as a fresco painter, Maulbertsch was also a formative figure in Central European artistic life as a creator of altarpieces and small-format oil sketches. He was a member of the Vienna Academy and eventually rose to become its professor, exerting a decisive influence on an entire generation of artists. Although his late Baroque style was increasingly regarded as outdated with the rise of Classicism, his work underwent an impressive reappraisal in the 20th century. Today, Franz Anton Maulbertsch is regarded as the pinnacle and last great representative of Baroque ceiling painting in Central Europe, and his works are represented in important museums and highly valued by connoisseurs.

