Artist

Izydor Jabłoński

Portrait of Izydor Jabłoński

1835–1905

Izydor Jabłoński was an artist. 1 work is cataloged here, principally at National Museum in Kraków. Izydor Jabłoński was born in Kraków.

Overview

Izydor Jabłoński (February 7, 1835 – November 13, 1905) was a Polish painter, professor at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Kraków, friend and biographer of Jan Matejko.

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Biography

He was born in Kraków. From 1848 to 1856, he studied at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Kraków, where he was taught drawing and painting by Wojciech Stattler and Władysław Łuszczkiewicz, and sculpture by Henryk Kossowski. He completed his further studies in Munich and Rome. In the years of 1860 to 1861, he travelled around the Balkans and the Near East; and in 1873 around Russia. Between 1877 and 1899, he was a professor at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts. His paintings are themed around religion, and he made many polychromes for churches in Lesser Poland. During his time as professor, he taught many artists which lived in Kraków at the time, inter alia: Józef Mehoffer, Edward Okuń, Wojciech Weiss, Ludwik Stasiak, Stanisław Wyspiański, and Zefiryn Ćwikliński. In 1879, he was the director of the Society of Friends of Fine Arts (Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Sztuk Pięknych) in Kraków. He died in Kraków and was buried in the Rakowicki Cemetery, in the tomb of the Szubertów Family, in the Fifth Quarter. In the Holy Cross Church (Kościół Świętego Krzyża) in Kraków, there is an epitaph for the Jabłonski Family, for Izydor Jabłoński and his brother Leon Jabłoński – a sculptor.

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Collections represented