Pál Böhm

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Pál Böhm
Munich, Germany
NationalityHungarian
Known forPainter
MovementOrientalist

Pál (Paul) Böhm (28 December 1839,

Nagyvárad - 29 March 1905, Munich) was a Hungarian genre
painter.

Life and work

He first studied drawing with his father, who was a maintenance engineer at the bishop's manor. After finishing elementary school, he tried his hand at many crafts, including carpentry, coppersmithing and toy making. In 1859, he joined a group of scenery painters and learned that craft from Antal Haan [hu].[1] In 1862, he finally decided to become a painter, eventually travelling to Vienna, where he copied the works on display in the Belvedere Palace. In 1865, he returned to his hometown and attempted to make a living by painting portraits and altarpieces. He also briefly operated a painting school that was attended by László Paál.[1]

Two years later, he was sufficiently established to earn a decent living and moved to Budapest, where he exhibited with the National Society of Hungarian Fine Arts. In 1871, he received a scholarship from Tivadar Pauler, the Minister of Religion and Education. This enabled him to travel to Munich,[1] where he quickly became part of the city's artistic life and associated with a group of Hungarian painters led by Géza Mészöly. On several occasions, he stayed in the Tisza region, where he painted and sketched, but settled in Munich permanently in 1875. After this point, his paintings lost some of their freshness and are generally considered by critics to be rather commercial.[1]

Selected paintings

  • Preparing for the Nativity (1870)
    Preparing for the Nativity (1870)
  • Scene on the Banks of the Tisza River (1873)
    Scene on the Banks
    of the Tisza River (1873)
  • The Tumbrel (date unknown)
    The Tumbrel
    (date unknown)
  • At a Brewery in Munich (date unknown)
    At a Brewery in Munich
    (date unknown)

References

  1. ^ a b c d Böhm Pál @ Magyar Elektronikus Könyvtár

Further reading

  • György Seregélyi: Magyar festők és grafikusok adattára (Database of Hungarian Painters and Graphic Artists), Szeged, 1988,
  • Művészeti lexikon (Art Lexicon) (edited by Nóra Aradi), Akadémiai Kiadó, 1983,
  • Károly Lyka: Nemzeti romantika (National Romanticism), Corvina Kiadó, Budapest, 1982,

External links