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1871 - 1960

人物简介

  • Top-ranked work: Portrait Of A Man
  • Art period: Modern
  • Born: 1871, Siatista, Greece
  • Nationality: Greece
  • Copyright status: Under copyright
  • 更多…
  • Lifespan: 89 years
  • Movements: impressionism
  • Top 3 works:
    • Portrait Of A Man
    • Portrait Of Maria Kalfopoulou
    • Nikopolis
  • Works on APS: 22
  • Died: 1960

艺术知识测试

每道题只有一个正确答案。

题目 1:
Where was Thalia Flora-Karavia born?
题目 2:
What artistic movement is Thalia Flora-Karavia associated with?
题目 3:
For what was Thalia Flora-Karavia particularly known?
题目 4:
Where did Thalia Flora-Karavia study painting?

Early Life and Education

  • Born: 1871 in Siatista, Western Macedonia, Greece
  • Family moved to Istanbul (Constantinople) in 1874
  • Scholarship to the Zappeion School for Girls (1883-1888)
  • Briefly worked as a teacher after graduation
  • Decided to pursue painting and moved to Munich in 1895

Training and Artistic Development in Munich

  • Studied with Georgios Jakobides and Nikolaos Gyzis
  • Unable to attend the Munich Academy of Fine Arts due to being a woman, she took private courses.
  • Studied alongside notable artists like Nikolaos Vokos, Paul Nauen, Anton Ažbe, and Walter Thor.
  • Returned to Istanbul in 1898 before returning to Munich until 1900.
  • Early work initially followed the conservative rules of academic art.

War Correspondence and Artistic Focus

  • Traveled extensively throughout Europe.
  • Married journalist Nicholas Karavia in 1907, settling in Alexandria, Egypt for thirty years.
  • Founded and ran an art school in Alexandria.
  • During the Balkan Wars (1912-1913), worked as a correspondent for an Alexandrian newspaper, documenting the war through sketches.
  • Her drawings captured the lives of soldiers, refugees, and casualties with an impressionistic style.
  • Published "Impressions of the 1912–1913 War in Macedonia and Epirus" (1936) featuring these sketches.
  • Continued documenting conflicts including the Asia Minor Campaign (1921) and the Greco-Italian War (1940-41).

Style, Themes, and Recognition

  • Artistic Style: Initially conservative academic style, later adopted Impressionist and plein air techniques.
  • Themes: Portraits, landscapes, still lifes, genre scenes, book illustrations. Her portraits were noted for their psychological insight.
  • Exhibitions: Exhibited extensively from 1898 onwards, including at the Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900), Istanbul, Athens, Cairo, Rome, and the Venice Biennale (1934).
  • Recognition: Awarded the silver medal of the Athens Academy in 1945 and the Cross of the Order of Beneficence in 1954.

Later Life and Legacy

  • Returned to Greece in 1940 and lived there until her death.
  • Died in Athens in 1960.
  • Collections: A significant collection of her war sketches is held by the War Museum of Athens, with approximately 70 works donated to the Municipal Art Gallery of Ioannina in 1957.
  • Historical Significance: Thalia Flora-Karavia's work provides a unique visual record of wartime experiences from a female perspective, blending artistic skill with journalistic observation. Her contribution to documenting historical events through art is significant.