FRANZ HAGENAUER

About the artist 1906 – Vienna – 1986
Designed by Franz Hagenauer, Vienna 1977
Executed by Werkstätte Hagenauer, model no. 1029
Marked WHW in circle, HAGENAUER WIEN
Dimensions H 45 cm, W 26 cm, D 20 cm
Material Nickel-plated brass, excellent original condition
Provenance private property, USA
Shown Künstlerhaus Wien, 1503. Mitgliederausstellung, June 2022 to September 2022
Literature comp. contemporary photograph in the Hagenauer archives at the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts (MAK), Vienna, inv. no. HAF 1189

Among the most impressive and best-known works by Professor Franz Hagenauer are his depictions of human heads. These sculptures remain a consistent feature of this important designer’s oeuvre from the mid-1920s until his death in 1986. The artist’s continuous further development and related modifications to his style are clearly reflected in his works. While his early oeuvre still featured elements also shared by contemporary works by Amedeo Modigliani or Constantin Brancusi, Franz Hagenauer started to develop his individual style in the mid-1930s – a completely unique style, which was to remain a hallmark of all his future works.

Hagenauer’s teaching assignment as a professor of creative design at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna also inspired his own creativity, with the new impulses clearly reflected in his oeuvre. While his figural objects were initially fully sculptural, he moved to designing almost two-dimensional heads from the end of the 1960s. These heads were also executed in a new technique: a nickel-plated brass plate served as the base, onto which he soldered tubes and other metal elements. Using only a few materials, he thus succeeded by applying only a few sophisticated production steps in creating highly individual art objects of outstanding expressive intensity.  

Sincere thanks to Dr Maria-Luise Jesch, Austrian Museum of Applied Arts Vienna, Hagenauer archive, for this information.

M63/24

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POLYGONAL HEAD ⋅ FRANZ HAGENAUER ⋅ Hagenauer Franz ⋅ Franz Hagenauer, Vienna 1977

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