Anton NowakAnton Nowak (10 May 1865 – 28 May 1932) was an Austrian artist and graphic designer. LifeNowak was born in Maribor and studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna under Christian Griepenkerl and Leopold Karl Müller.[1][2] In 1894, he joined the Vienna Künstlerhaus.[3] He was a founding member of the Vienna Secession,[4] and had a work shown at the group's first exhibition.[5] Nowak contributed woodcuts to the group's magazine Ver Sacrum, taking inspiration from the northern Adriatic region.[1] He was on the group's working committee in 1898,[6] 1902,[7] and served as the group's president in 1908-09.[3] He also painted watercolours of Austrian countryside and the city of Brno, where he ran a painting school. He may have died in the city, but this is not certain.[1][3] StyleNowak's paintings were brightly coloured and naturalistic; under the Secession's influence, he experimented with pointillism in the style of Théo van Rysselberghe. His work as a designer was firmly within the Secession's tradition.[1] He was influenced by Theodor von Hörmann.[3] References
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