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Important Pair of busts Franz Hagenauer Werkstatte Hagenauer 1970s

SKU 714

Important pair of metal-busts Lady and Gentleman, Franz Hagenauer, Werkstatte Hagenauer Vienna, 1970s, brass nickel-plated, marked

  • Height: 52cm, Width: 21cm, Depth: 21cm
  • 1970 to 1975
    Epoch: Design
    Technique: brass, nickel-plated, soldered and polished; metal applications
    Provenance: Private collection, New York
    both sculptures marked with “FRANZ”,”HAGENAUER/WIEN”, “wHw” in the circle, “MADE IN/AUSTRIA”, model number “1060” and monogram “KS” for the executing master craftsman Karl Schmidt; bib.: documented photograph of two heads in the Hagenauer Archive at Museum of Applied Arts Vienna, inv. no. HAF 1182
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    SKU 714
    Description

    With their head tilted to the side, our busts look into the room from a single, large eye. Nicely dressed up, the gentleman has combed his hair neatly and tied his bow. The lady’s curls are coiffed accurately and she wears a pearl pendant. Both their stylized noses emphasize the elongated faces.

    Such metal sculptures from the 1970s were among the most desirable objects from the Werkstatte Hagenauer. Franz Hagenauer thus further developed his reduced, ovoid heads from the 1930s. He retained the futuristic character with a geometric-oval shape, but adorned the heads with charming attributes, thus loosening up the appearance. Thus, his bow tie and her stylized, perfectly fitting hairstyle can be understood with a wink.
    The cartoonish designs are perfectly executed. This can well be seen on the finely soldered metal applications and in details such as the gentleman’s finely hammered ear or the lady’s curls. The two halves of the heads are also soldered flawlessly; only the closest inspection reveals the seam on the polished heads.

    The polished surfaces of the sculptures offer an additional attraction, as the heads are not only an object of contemplation but also a mirroring surface for their surroundings. Thus, our pair of busts fills the space plastically and optically.

    Artist

    Franz Hagenauer (Vienna 1906 – 1986 Salzburg) was an Austrian sculptor and designer who, together with his brother Karl, ran the Werstatte Hagenauer Wien. With his avant-garde metal sculptures he wrote Austrian design history.

    As the son of the master girdler Carl Hagenauer (1872-1928), Franz Hagenauer had the opportunity to learn the artisan side of metalworking in his father’s business from an early age.

    Artistically inclined, he received his education at the Vienna School of Arts and Crafts from 1920, first with Franz Cizek (ornamental form theory), then with Anton Hanak (sculpture) and for a time also with Josef Hoffmann (workshop for girdling and metalwork).

    After completing his education in 1925 and several study visits to Paris, Rome and Berlin, he joined his father’s metal workshop, where he officially began an apprenticeship as a girdler in 1928.

    Until the death of his older brother Karl in 1956, the two brothers worked together in their parents’ business. Franz then took over the management in 1956 and continued to run the workshop until his death in 1986.

    Franz Hagenauer’s youth and training period in the 1920s coincided with a time of cultural upheaval, when the various art movements of modernism were emerging, such as Art Deco, New Realism, and Bauhaus. Consequently, his early, sculptural works are also influenced by Futurism.

    In his early phase until the end of the 1930s, Franz Hagenauer, in keeping with his artistic vision, worked primarily as a sculptor, producing highly stylized head sculptures, busts, and semi-plastic objects in chased metal.

    The sculptures, some of which are masterfully chased from a single sheet of brass, embody the search for a modern, highly abstracted form language and are often reduced to basic geometric forms. With these high-quality one-offs, Franz Hagenauer laid the foundation for his artistic vocabulary of forms, which he would use until his late years.

    During the decades of its existence and due to the corresponding economic conditions, the Hagenauer workshop at times produced more simple but nevertheless high-quality utility or decorative objects made of metal or wood. The authorship of many of these designs can no longer be attributed to either Karl or Franz Hagenauer specifically.

    “It is certain… that throughout his life, Franz Hagenauer found his artistic fulfillment not in the design of utility or decorative objects, (…) but in his sculptural activity.”*.

    From 1962 to 1976, Franz Hagenauer taught at the University of Applied Arts. Through his teaching activities and in exchange with the students, he received new creative impulses for his own work. This period also saw the development from three-dimensional objects to once again reduced, flatter, two-dimensional art objects, such as mask-like wall sculptures.

    From the late 1960s onwards, works from the Hagenauer workshop experience increased demand in the United States. During this period, early models by Franz Hagenauer are produced again, partly in modified form, and exported directly to America.

    In any case, the name Franz Hagenauer is inextricably linked with the Werkstatte Hagenauer and stands for modern, timeless Austrian design.

    *Olga Kronsteiner, Monika Wenzl-Bachmeier (ed.), Hagenauer – Viennese Modernism and New Realism, exhibition catalogue Wagner:Werk Postsparkasse, Vienna 2011, p. 48

    Execution

    Werkstätte Hagenauer – stylistic evolution and importance

    Today, the Werkstatte Hagenauer is rightfully among the most important Austrian Arts & Crafts manufacturers of the 20th century. The clear, strict formal language combined with dynamic poses and the usage of brass, nickel-plated, patinated or bare, along with copper, alpaca and exotic wood shows a high level of recognition.

    However, it took the siblings Karl and Franz Hagenauer quite some time until they developed their own unique style. Karl and Franz both attended the Vienna School of Arts & Crafts and studied under Josef Hoffmann, Oskar Strnad, Anton Hanak and Dagobert Peche.

    Until the closure of the Werkstatte Hagenauer on December 30, 1987, art objects of outstanding quality were still being produced. The siblings Karl and Franz Hagenauer strongly contributed in coining the term „design“ through their legacy and are surely among the most influential Austrian artists of the 20th century.

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    Important Pair of busts Franz Hagenauer Werkstatte Hagenauer 1970s

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