Venice (1924)

Technique: Giclée quality print
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More about this artwork

Elemír Halász-Hradil's painting "Venice (1924)" offers viewers an enchanting vision of the famed city of water. This artwork captures the timeless charm of Venice through a narrow canal flanked by weathered, colorful buildings. A small bridge arches gracefully over the water, serving both as a connecting path for the city’s residents and as a focal point in this serene composition.In the foreground, two boats are moored along the sun-dappled canal, their presence adding a sense of quietude and daily life to the scene. Subtle reflections ripple across the water, mirroring the pastel facades and intimate details of the surrounding architecture. This masterful use of light and color evokes the unique atmosphere of Venice, where history and beauty converge in every corner.Halász-Hradil’s impressionistic brushwork imbues the scene with a soft, almost dreamlike quality, inviting the observer to lose themselves in this picturesque Venetian moment.

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Elemír Halász-Hradil (1873 m. - 1948 m.) was a Slovak painter of Hungarian origin.
He lived in Vienna from 1892 to 1894.The following year he moved to Košice. He studied at Simon Hollósy's private school in Munich from 1897 to 1901, he then continued his studies at the Académie Julian in Paris with Professor Jean-Paul Laurens from 1902 to 1903.
With a soft palette and hazy paint handling, Halász-Hradil executed a variety of quiet portraits and scenes of everyday life. Along with selling his paintings, Halász-Hradil made a living as a painting teacher.