'Peasant Girl in a Cornfield'
An original oil on canvas by the Listed Hungarian Artist (1861 - 1942).
The painting is titled 'Peasant Girl in a Cornfield'. It comes signed bottom left has has original Gallery labels verso. It is housed in a decorative swept frame. Antal Neogrady is a Listed and highly collected Hungarian Artist who specialised in this type of scene.
Frame Size: 27"ins x 31"ins
Painting Size: 20"ins x 24"ins
Price: £500.00 +P&P
Antal Neogrady Hungarian 1861-1942
An artist of fine sentiment and imagination, Neogrady displayed a rare gift for investing his subjects with his own personal touch. Born in Galsa, Hungary, he passed through the Budapest Academy before continuing his art education in Munich. There, at the Academy of Art, he studied under Gabriel von Hackl, a genre painter, and Alex von Wagner, also a Hungarian, who painted historical genre and landscapes. Wagner, only twenty eight when he became a Professor, was able to instil in his pupil a directness of conception, a simplicity of subject that made his works easily understood.
Neogrady eventually returned to Budapest as a painter
An original oil on canvas by the Listed Hungarian Artist (1861 - 1942).
The painting is titled 'Peasant Girl in a Cornfield'. It comes signed bottom left has has original Gallery labels verso. It is housed in a decorative swept frame. Antal Neogrady is a Listed and highly collected Hungarian Artist who specialised in this type of scene.
Frame Size: 27"ins x 31"ins
Painting Size: 20"ins x 24"ins
Price: £500.00 +P&P
Antal Neogrady Hungarian 1861-1942
An artist of fine sentiment and imagination, Neogrady displayed a rare gift for investing his subjects with his own personal touch. Born in Galsa, Hungary, he passed through the Budapest Academy before continuing his art education in Munich. There, at the Academy of Art, he studied under Gabriel von Hackl, a genre painter, and Alex von Wagner, also a Hungarian, who painted historical genre and landscapes. Wagner, only twenty eight when he became a Professor, was able to instil in his pupil a directness of conception, a simplicity of subject that made his works easily understood.
Neogrady eventually returned to Budapest as a painter