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Naomi Rozenberg : ウィキペディア英語版
Ferenc Joachim

Ferenc Joachim (May 21, 1882 - September 16, 1964) was a Hungarian (Magyar) painter of portraits and landscapes in oil, watercolors and pastels on canvas, board and paper. He studied and painted in Budapest and Western Europe. Hungarian usage puts the surname before the given name, in the form Joachim Ferenc. As an untitled member of the minor nobility, Joachim was entitled to bear the honorary prefix ''Csejtei'', so prior to the Communist abolition of honorifics in 1947 his name might be found in the form "Csejtei Joachim Ferenc" (or "Cs. Joachim F.") in Hungarian, or in German "Franz Joachim von Csejthey".
==Early life==

Joachim's parents were Ferenc Joachim and Emilia Metz of Szeged, Hungary. He had two brothers, Jozsef and Károly, and four sisters, Gizella, Mariska, Jolán, and Mici. The family was Roman Catholic. Some of his siblings were also artists in their own right: Jozsef was a sculptor and painter while Gizella became a stage actress.
Ferenc Joachim was born in Szeged, in what was at that time the Austro-Hungarian Empire. For the first 36 years of his life he lived and worked in Hungary and in various parts of Western Europe.
Little is known about the first 30 years of Joachim's life. It appears that Joachim was married twice. He married Margit Gráf (1892–1965) around 1912. They had three children: one daughter, Piroska (1913–2007), and two sons, Ferenc Gabriel (1920–1989) and Attila (1923–1947).〔Photographs of Piroska, Ferenc Gabriel, and Attila are available on Wikimedia Commons. Accessed 8 January 2008.〕
Joachim studied painting in Budapest (Hungary), Vienna (Austria), Munich (Germany), and Paris (France).〔Éber László, ''Művészeti Lexikon – Épitészet, Szobrászat, Festészet, Iparművészet'', vol. 1. Budapest: Gyözö Andor, 1935, p. 513 (Scan uploaded to Wikipedia 10 July 2006; accessed
6 January 2008); Hans Vollmer, ''Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler des XX. Jahrhunderts'' (Leipzig, 1953), vol. 2, p. 551.〕 He studied with Hungarian art educator Simon Hollósy at his private school in Munich,〔(visuart.hu ). Accessed 6 January 2008.〕 and periodically visited Hollósy's Nagybánya Artists Colony in Transylvania.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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